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Read the
magazine
story to find out more. |
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 ARS scientists have developed
a new bait that may help control varroa mites, the top pest of honey bees.
Click the image for more information about it. |
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New Bait Lures Varroa Mite to its Doom
By Jan
Suszkiw July 1, 2009
Varroa mites could literally be walking into a trapthanks
to a new attractant developed by Agricultural
Research Service (ARS) scientists in Gainesville, Fla.
The 1/16-inch long parasite, Varroa destructor, is a top pest
of honey bees nationwide, hindering the beneficial insects' ability to
pollinate almonds, blueberries, apples, zucchini and many other flowering
crops.
At the ARS
Chemistry
Research Unit in Gainesville, research leader
Peter
Teal and colleagues are testing a bait-and-kill approach using sticky
boards and natural chemical attractants called semiochemicals.
In nature, Varroa mites rely on these semiochemicals to
locateand then feed onthe bloodlike hemolymph of both adult honey
bees and their brood. Severe infestations can decimate an affected hive within
several monthsand rob the beekeeper of profits from honey or pollinating
services. But in this case, the mites encounter a more heady bouquet of honey
bee odors that lure the parasites away from their intended hosts and onto the
sticky boards, where they starve.
In preliminary tests, 35 to 50 percent of mites dropped off the bees
when exposed to the attractants. Free-roving mites found the semiochemicals
even more attractive, according to Teal.
Moreover, the extra dose of semiochemicals wafting through hives
didn't appear to significantly interfere with the honey bees' normal behavior
or activity, added Teal who, along with postdoctoral associate
Adrian
Duehl and University of Florida
collaborator Mark Carroll, reported the results this past January at the
2009 North American Beekeeping
Conference in Reno, Nev.
The team hopes ARS' patenting of the Varroa mite attractants
will encourage an industrial partner to develop the technology further.
Read more
about the research in the July 2009 issue of Agricultural Research
magazine.
ARS is the principal intramural scientific research agency of the
U.S. Department of Agriculture.