FW: Russian Honey Bees Readied for American Hives

Lon J. Rombough (lonrom@hevanet.com)
Thu, 05 Aug 1999 08:05:08 -0700

Forwarded for the interest of list members.
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From: "ARS News Service" <isnv@ars-grin.gov>
To: "ARS News List" <ars-news@ars-grin.gov>
Subject: Russian Honey Bees Readied for American Hives
Date: Thu, Aug 5, 1999, 7:06 AM

STORY LEAD:
Breeder Readies Russian Honey Bees for American Hives

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ARS News Service
Agricultural Research Service, USDA
Marcia Wood, (510) 559-6070, mwood@asrr.arsusda.gov
August 5, 1999
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Hardy Russian honey bees that resist attack by devastating varroa mites will
begin showing up in American beehives within a year, thanks to scientists in
Louisiana with the Agricultural Research Service, USDA's chief research
wing. The Russian bees' genetic resistance will provide beekeepers with a
tool--in addition to chemical pesticides--to control the mites.

Varroa mites--eight-legged parasites--are among the worst enemies of honey
bees worldwide. In the U.S., the mites have attacked bees in almost every
state. Though only about one- sixteenth-inch in size, they can destroy a
hive of tens of thousands of bees in as little as 6 months. The mites have
also eliminated most of North America's wild honey bees.

Under a Cooperative Research and Development Agreement signed this week by
ARS and Bernard's Apiaries, Inc., Breaux Bridge, La., bee breeder Steven J.
Bernard is authorized to raise hundreds of Russian honey bee queens this
fall and winter. The bees will be available for sale to U.S. beekeepers
early next year. The beekeepers will use the queens to produce more queens
for populating hives with mite-resistant offspring. These offspring will be
fathered by male bees, known as drones, from the American hives.

Compared to domestic honey bees, the Russian bees are more than twice as
resistant to attack by varroa mites, according to tests by geneticist Thomas
E. Rinderer and colleagues at ARS' Honey Bee Breeding, Genetics and
Physiology Research Unit in Baton Rouge, La.

The domestic honey bee and the Russian honey bee are the same species, Apis
mellifera. But the Russian bees have had to develop resistance to survive in
their homeland, the mite-infested Primorsky region of far eastern Russia.
Rinderer studied the bees there, then imported them under a federal permit.
He said it is likely that wild--as well as domesticated--honey bees in the
U.S. will eventually have Russian honey bee parentage.

Besides producing honey, honey bees pollinate dozens of crops, from apples
to zucchini, worth $8 to $10 billion. An article in the August issue of the
agency's monthly magazine, Agricultural Research, tells more. View it on the
World Wide Web at

http://www.ars.usda.gov/is/AR/archive/aug99/bees0899.htm

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Scientific contact: Thomas E. Rinderer, ARS Honey Bee Breeding, Genetics and
Physiology Research Unit, Baton Rouge, La., phone (225) 767-9280, fax (225)
766-9212, trinderer@asrr.arsusda.gov.
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This item is one of the news releases and story leads that ARS Information
distributes on weekdays to fax and e-mail subscribers. You can also get the
latest ARS news on the World Wide Web at
http://www.ars.usda.gov/is/pr/thelatest.htm.
* Feedback and questions to ARS News Service via e-mail: isnv@ars-grin.gov.
* ARS Information Staff, 5601 Sunnyside Ave., Room 1-2251, Beltsville MD
20705-5128, (301) 504- 1617, fax 504-1648.

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