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New Zealand Beekeeping
Why do swarm prevention?
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<blockquote data-quote="mischief" data-source="post: 7741" data-attributes="member: 333"><p>To ill health and the inability to adapt behaviourisms to cope with varroa.</p><p></p><p>Having gone back over Thomas Seeleys "Honeybee Ecology" to see if this is where I got the idea, (only half way through at the moment), he made mention of work done by Roethenbuhler and colleagues in regards to hygienic behaviour and that they found two genes related to this.</p><p>One for uncapping cells and one for brood removal, but also stated that each of the two controlling genes has a dominant allele which blocks the associated behaviour...</p><p>This section is talking about this behaviour in relation to AFB though, not varroa. page 136.</p><p>...and so I keep reading.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="mischief, post: 7741, member: 333"] To ill health and the inability to adapt behaviourisms to cope with varroa. Having gone back over Thomas Seeleys "Honeybee Ecology" to see if this is where I got the idea, (only half way through at the moment), he made mention of work done by Roethenbuhler and colleagues in regards to hygienic behaviour and that they found two genes related to this. One for uncapping cells and one for brood removal, but also stated that each of the two controlling genes has a dominant allele which blocks the associated behaviour... This section is talking about this behaviour in relation to AFB though, not varroa. page 136. ...and so I keep reading. [/QUOTE]
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Why do swarm prevention?
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