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Summer Management

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Title: Summer Management


1
Summer Management
  • 7
  • Presented
  • By
  • The Ohio State Beekeepers Association

2
Summer Management
  • Many commercial beekeepers are working hard to
    get their bees ready for pollination

3
Summer Management
  • Topics to be discussed include
  • Diseases
  • Making splits
  • Keeping a watchful eye for problemsRobbing/floods
  • The material presented in this slide set is quite
    long and should be divided into two sessions.

4
Diseases
  • Based upon date provided by the Ohio Department
    of Agriculture -- 2005

5
Brood diseases in Ohio
  • 2005 Apiary Statistics
  • From ODA
  • Colonies Inspected 21,389
  • American Foulbrood 388 Colonies
  • European Foulbrood 31 Colonies
  • Chalk brood 396 Colonies

6
Summer Management
  • Brood Disease
  • American foulbrood

7
Summer Management
  • Diseases/Pest
  • Good healthy brood
  • American foulbrood
  • 2005 Apiary Statistics
  • From ODA
  • Colonies Inspected 21,389  
  • Number with AFB
  • 388
  • That doesnt seem like many but this is a serious
    disease spread very easily and at some time or
    other beekeepers will experience it.
  • American foulbrood

8
Summer Management
  • Diseases/Pest
  • American foulbrood
  • Young larva ingest the bacterial spores when fed
    by nurse bees.  The spores then germinate and
    begin to grow rapidly.  Death to the larva
    usually occurs as the pupae stage is reached.   
    Larva that die turn a coffee brown and begin to
    melt down into a gooey mass.   Housecleaning bees
    then try to remove the dead larva and in the
    process become contaminated with the bacterial
    spores that are now dormant.  The house bees then
    carry the spores to other bees, and the spores
    end up either in the honey stores or are fed
    again to new larva.  Thus the disease is spread
    within the colony rather rapidly.

9
Summer Management
  • Diseases/Pest
  • American foulbrood
  • Robbing is one of the ways that American
    foulbrood is spread.    Robbing bees will take
    back contaminated honey to their own hives which
    will result in larva being fed with spore laced
    honey.  The disease will spread to many colonies
    within several miles from the infected hive.
  • You should always check for American foulbrood
    when examining your hives.  If you are able catch
    this disease early,  further spread can be
    prevented. 

10
Summer Management
  • Diseases/Pest
  • American foulbrood
  • The way to test for this disease is to place a
    thin stick, twig, straw into a cell with this
    coffee brown gluey substance. Stir and draw the
    thin stick out. If the gluey substance sticks
    and ropes, it is most likely AFB.
  • You can also take a sample of comb from this
    frame and have your bee inspector send it in for
    confirmation of AFB.

11
Summer Management
  • Diseases/Pest
  • American foulbrood
  • Treatment
  • If diagnosed as AFB, the colony and bees can be
    treated in Ohio with Terramycin or Tylan. This
    must be used and consumed by the bees at least 4
    weeks prior to a honey crop. These only mask the
    disease. The spores are not killed and can
    re-infect the hive
  • The only sure way to get rid of it

12
Summer Management
  • Diseases/Pest
  • American foulbrood
  • Treatment
  • Burn

13
Summer Management
  • Brood Disease
  • European foulbrood

14
Summer Management
  • Diseases/Pest
  • Good healthy brood
  • European foulbrood
  • 2005 Apiary Statistics
  • From ODA
  • Colonies Inspected 21,389  
  • Number with AFB 13
  • European foulbrood

15
Summer Management
  • Brood Disease
  • European foulbrood
  • Cause
  • European foulbrood (EFB) is a brood disease of
    honeybees caused by the bacterium Melissococcus
    pluton.. Larvae are most susceptible to infection
    when they are less than 48 hours old, and usually
    die while still in the coiled state. Poor
    nutrition and severe stress, for example
    insecticide poisoning, often cause this disease
    to break out. The larvae first turn yellow then
    brown in color. The disease is usually noticed in
    early spring, and to a lesser extent in autumn.

16
Summer Management
  • Brood Disease
  • European foulbrood
  • Multiplication and spread
  • The bacteria multiply vigorously in the gut of
    larval bees which have been given food
    contaminated with M. pluton.. As with American
    foulbrood, EFB can also be spread by
  • bees robbing infected hives
  • transferring infected honey supers and combs to
    clean hives
  • using contaminated beekeeping equipment
  • feeding infected honey and pollen.

17
Summer Management
  • Brood Disease
  • European foulbrood
  • Treatment Good beekeeping hygiene will keep this
    disease in control, however, if a hive should be
    found with EFB it is important to prevent any
    robbing of the hive and frames from this hive
    should not be transferred to any other hive.  
    Treatment with terramycin A colony recovers
    rapidly. The effect of EFB is to reduce a
    colonies bee population and thus reduce a honey
    crop.  Also consider requeening if the bees are
    not cleaning up the disease.

18
Summer Management
  • Brood Disease
  • Chalkbrood

19
Summer Management
  • Brood Disease
  • Good healthy brood
  • Chalkbrood
  • 2005 Apiary Statistics
  • From ODA
  • Colonies Inspected 21,389  
  • Number with Chalkbrood 596
  • Chalkbrood

20
Summer Management
  • Brood Disease
  • Chalkbrood
  • Identification A fungal disease caused by
    Ascosphaera apis .  It is now found throughout
    the United States.  It is a disease of stress in
    the early spring to early summer.  Severe cases
    can be found in the comb later in the year. 
    Often the bees will try to remove the mummy larva
    -- it is called chalk brood because the mummies
    are chalk like in appearance and touch.  These
    mummies can often be seen at the entrance of the
    hive.  

21
Summer Management
  • Brood Disease
  • Chalkbrood
  • Treatment There is no chemical approved
    treatment for this disease.  The best management
    plan would be to strengthen a weak hive with
    more brood and bees, replace the queen
    (literature indicates that it might be genetic
    characteristic) with a queen of known hygienic
    behavior.   To avoid spreading chalkbrood, you
    can avoid using pollen from a chalkbrood hive for
    supplemental feeding and avoid mixing  frames of
    comb from a chalkbrood hive with other hives you
    may have.

22
Insect pest in hives
  • 2005 Apiary Statistics
  • From ODA
  • Colonies Inspected 21,389
  • Varroa Mite 6,720 colonies
  • Tracheal Mite 41 colonies
  • Small Hive Beetle 539 colonies
  • Wax moth n/a

23
Insect pest in hives
  • Varroa Mites
  • 2005 Apiary Statistics
  • From ODA
  • Colonies Inspected 21,389
  • Varroa Mite 6,720 colonies
  • The greatest threat to all beekeepers in Ohio.
    It has been responsible for more beekeepers
    leaving the hobby than anything else. This is
    the honey bees 1 enemy.

24
Insect pest in hives
  • Varroa Mites
  • Identification This mite is known as varroa
    destructor.    Varroa mites can be found in the
    United States except Hawaii.  The mite is small
    but can be seen with the naked eye.  Mites are
    about the size of a pin head and are
    reddish/brown in color. 

25
Insect pest in hives
  • Varroa Mites
  • They can be detected by several methods. 
  • One is with varroa screens and a sticky board. 
    Mites fall through the screen onto the sticky
    board where then can then be detected and counted
    to determine the infestation level. 
  • The second method involves checking drone brood
    for mites.
  • The third method  involves scooping up 100 or so
    bees and subjecting them to a sugar roll or ether
    roll test.  The sugar roll test does not kill the
    bees and is preferred.  The method is simple. 
    Scoop up the bees into a pint jar, add powdered
    sugar (a tablespoon will do) and shake and roll
    the jar. 
  • Varroa mites will drop off the bees to the
    bottom  of the jar where they can be counted.

26
Insect pest in hives
  • Varroa Mites
  • They can be detected by several methods. 
  • Most common is the sticky board test. A
    protective screen is placed over the sticky board
    and the sticky board is left in the hive for a
    period of 24 hours. The mites on the sticky
    board are then counted. A sticky board can be
    made easily by taking a sheet of wax paper and
    coating it with vegetable oil. Lay it on the
    bottom board and place screen over it. This will
    also detect chalk brood.

27
Insect pest in hives
  • Varroa Mites
  • They can be detected by several methods. 
  • Second method involves checking drone brood for
    mites like shown in the picture. You can check
    individual capped drone cells -- use your hive
    tool or a cappings fork to remove pupa from the
    drone comb.

28
Insect pest in hives
  • Varroa Mites
  • They can be detected by several methods. 
  • Third method involves scooping up 100 or so bees
    and subjecting them to a sugar roll or ether roll
    test.  The sugar roll test does not kill the bees
    and is preferred.  The method is simple.  Scoop
    up the bees into a pint jar, add powdered sugar
    (a tablespoon will do) and shake and roll the
    jar.  Varroa mites will drop off the bees to the
    bottom  of the jar where they can be counted.

29
Insect pest in hives
  • Varroa Mites
  • They can be detected by several methods. 
  • Remember that more than 85 of the mites in a
    colony are in capped brood cells and not visually
    detectable. If a bee inspector see one mite, he
    or she will indicate on inspection report that
    all hives in your bee yard are infected.

30
Insect pest in hives
  • Varroa Mites
  • Treatment
  • I can not tell you exactly what will work. A
    number of products are available for the
    beekeeper. Some work at times and at other times
    have no apparent effect.

31
Insect pest in hives
  • Varroa Mites
  • Treatment
  • In general use
  • Apistan strips (10 fluvalinate)
  • CheckMite (Coumaphos)
  • Formic Acid
  • Sucrocide
  • Apiguard (Thymol)
  • Powdered sugar
  • Dont ask me which is best!

32
Insect pest in hives
  • Tracheal Mites
  • 2005 Apiary Statistics
  • From ODA
  • Colonies Inspected 21,389
  • Tracheal Mite 41 colonies
  • Still a problem. Introduced in the mid 1880s.
    A real problem in the early 1990s in Ohio.

33
Insect pest in hives
  • Tracheal Mites
  • Identification  This mite is named Acarapis
    woodi .  It was first identified as the Isle of
    Wight Disease.  This mite has become well
    established in the United States except Hawaii. 
    These mites can be observed under a microscope. 
    They are found in the tracheae of adult honey
    bees. 

34
Insect pest in hives
  • Tracheal Mites
  •   Highly infested hives usually die in the fall
    or winter.  One may find few bees in a dead
    hive.  This is contrary to starvation when most
    of the bees will be on the face of the comb --
    dead.   Early detection is important.  If the
    beekeeper notices a rapid decline in population,
    the situation is already out of hand. 
  • Fortunately, breeding better queen bees with
    resistance to the tracheal mite has reduced the
    tracheal mite problem from what it was 10 years
    ago.

35
Insect pest in hives
  • Small Hive Beetles
  • 2005 Apiary Statistics
  • From ODA
  • Colonies Inspected 21,389
  • Small Hive Beetles 539 colonies

36
Insect pest in hives
  • Small Hive Beetles
  • Identification  The SHB is found primarily in
    the Southern states of the United States is now
    found in many other states especially states that
    import bees for pollination.  It is called
    Aethina tumida . 
  • The small beetle is black and can be found
    moving rapidly inside the hive when exposed to
    sun light.
  • The Larvae may be mistaken for wax moth larva but
    they do not spin cocoons as the wax moth larva
    and leave a slime trail within the hive.  They
    can make a complete mess of a hive which can
    result in the loss of comb in the frames and loss
    of honey crop.  This beetle seems to prefer weak
    hives especially queen less hives to do its
    damage.

37
Insect pest in hives
  • Small Hive Beetles
  • Treatment  Several treatments are available to
    the beekeeper for SHB. 
  • First, a ground drench - SHB larva crawl from the
    entrance of a hive and pupate in the ground
    around the hive stand.  The product is called
    GardStar.  Always read label directions for the
    use of the product. 
  • Second, CheckMite - TM a strip which controls
    both SHB and Varroa mites.
  • Third , various trap designs. This is the trap
    designed by Mike Hood.

38
Insect pest in hives
  • Wax Moths
  • 2005 Apiary Statistics
  • From ODA
  • Colonies Inspected 21,389
  • Not reported in data collected by ODA.

39
Insect pest in hives
  • Wax Moths
  • Identification      There are two general types
    found in the United States Galleria mellonella
    L. the Greater Wax Moth and Achroia grisella F.
    the Lesser Wax Moth.
  • Both do considerable damage to bee hives that
    are in weak condition and to stored comb in
    supers.   It is the Wax worms are a serious
    problem in warm weather and dark conditions. 
    They can do a lot of damage in a very short
    period of time.

40
Insect pest in hives
  • Wax Moths
  •   Treatment  Wax moths attack weak hives. 
    Strong hives will kept them under control.  
  • Wax moths do not like light.  Exposing equipment
    to light, closing up equipment tightly and
    fumigating with "Para-moth" (Para-Dichlorobenzene
    crystals) a product available from most bee
    suppliers, and using biological control such as
    Bacillus thuringiensis.
  • See Ann Harmans article in February 2007 Bee
    Culture Magazine. A good investment in
    beekeeping is to subscribe to the bee magazines.

41
Other Minor Diseases
  • Nosema  A protozoan disease caused by Nosema
    apis.   Although most beekeepers do not consider
    this a major disease, I am going to list it as
    such.  It is very damaging to colonies of bees
    that over winter in the north.  It  kills more
    hives of bees than it is given credit for.  You
    can not see this disease because it is caused by
    spores which germinate in the midgut of the honey
    bee. Symptoms include shortened life span, fecal
    deposits on the inside of the hive and often on
    the outside of the hive.  One way to check for
    nosema is to pull the digestive tract out of a
    honey bee.  Healthy digestive tracts are tan in
    color.  If it is white, the bee is usually
    infected with nosema.   Treatment   The
    antibiotic Fumagillin sold as Fumidil-B mixed
    with sugar syrup and fed to the bees in the fall
    and spring.  Literature suggest 1 gal. of syrup
    per hive.  0.5 grams are mixed with 6 gallons of
    syrup to feed 6 hives.   This is an adult bee
    disease.

42
Other Minor Diseases
  • Sacbrood
  • Identification  It is a viral infection of the
    larva and is named after the sac-like appearance
    of dead larvae.  The skin of the larva is tough
    and rubbery and if pulled from the cell with a
    pair of tweezers, will look like a thin sac
    covering the dead larva.    It is not a common
    bee disease. Treatment    There is no treatment
    for viral diseases.  Just use good sanitary
    beekeeping practices while working with bees and
    if you find a colony with this disease, do not
    mix other hive frames etc. with this colony.  
    Replacing the queen with a queen from less
    susceptible stock may help.  
  •  

43
Other Minor Diseases
  • Paralysis
  • Identification  It is a viral infection of the
    adult bee.  Often the beekeeper will notice that
    the bees are hairless or very glossy as in old
    age.  One might notice a number of bees crawling
    on the ground around the hive entrance, or
    trembling on the landing board unable to fly.   I
    should point out that the trembling could be a
    symptom of pesticide poisoning as well.   In some
    cases the bees just disappear or dwindle away.
    Treatment  No treatment for a viral disease. 
    Requeening with good stock may help.
  •  

44
Making splits
  • Session Two

45
Summer Management
  • Making splits
  • Early season splits

46
Summer Management Making splits
  • Is this hive ready to split into two hives? Or
    should we wait for it to build up even more.

47
Summer Management Making splits
  • This is one hive with the top deep hive body next
    to the bottom brood box.
  • We can certainly make two hives from this one.

48
Summer Management Making splits
  • What is needed?
  • A New queen to be introduced to the queen-less
    hive
  • The equipment needed
  • Bottom board, top cover, inner cover.

49
Summer Management Making splits
  • A new location for the new hive is selected.
  • I like to move the queen with at least 4 or 5
    frames of brood to the new location. Older bees
    will return to the original hive location. I
    fill the deep box with additional frames and one
    division board feeder. I fill this with sugar
    syrup. I put an entrance reducer on this hive as
    well.

50
Summer Management Making splits
  • The hive in the original position is given a new
    queen and also fed. Both hives should be about
    equal strength at this time.
  • I keep them as single hives until the bees move
    into the outside frames and support brood raising
    in them. At that time add a second deep brood
    chamber. This is what your new hive should look
    like in 8 weeks.

51
Summer Management Making splits
  • Late Season Splits
  • I highly recommend a small inexpensive book
    titled,
  • Increase Essentials by Larry Connor.

52
Summer Management Making splits
  • Late Season Splits
  • One management technique is to raise a number of
    your own queens in nucs boxes. This might be
    something more for the experienced beekeeper.

53
Summer Management Making splits
  • Late Season Splits
  • A nuc box is a small hive. It may hold 3 to five
    frames. It may be used to mate virgin queens.
    This is something you might want to do with your
    swarm cells.
  • Note the small hives among the producing hives in
    the background of this picture.
  • This is a picture of Roger Miller who keeps about
    30 hives.

54
Summer Management Making splits
  • Late Season Splits
  • Some people have a lot of nucs. The bees in
    these nucs can be combined into full hives as
    they build strength. Or they can be used to
    raise queens. Later in the season they can be
    combined into full hives to survive the winter.
    Remember to feed your bees so they develop faster
    than if left on their own to gather nectar
    pollen.
  • This is a picture of Joe Latshaw with some of his
    nucs. Joe specializes in raising queens.

55
Summer Management Making splits
  • Late Season Splits
  • What you need are nuc boxes, frames of live bees
    to put into them.
  • Queens or queen cells.
  • Generally a nuc will need two or three frames of
    bees with developing brood, honey, and pollen.
  • Check your nucs often. If they become over
    crowded, move them into larger deep boxes.
  • Watch out for robbing by other bees.

56
Summer Management Making splits
  • Late Season Splits
  • This is an easy inexpensive way to increase your
    hive numbers without buying package bees in the
    spring each year.

57
Summer Management
  • Keeping a watchful eye for problemsRobbing,
    floods, etc.
  • There are many topics to cover in a beekeeping
    class. These topics are going to be mentioned
    because as a beginning beekeeper you may
    encounter them.

58
Summer Management
  • Robbing
  • Honey bees are good at finding nectar/honey
    sources. If they find any weak hives, they will
    arrive in large numbers to steal the weak hives
    honey. A new beekeeper will sometimes assume
    that the large number of bees indicate that the
    hive is doing well. Just the opposite is true.
  • And if you make the mistake of taking off your
    honey and putting it somewhere the bees can get
    at it, you will discover to your dismay the
    problem you created.
  • This is my friend Dave Duncan aboard one of his
    Ohio honey bees. Notice this bee has pollen on
    its legs, it is not a robbing bee.

59
Summer Management
  • Painting hives
  • I like nice white hives, but they are easy to
    see. Hive painted green or gray are harder to
    see. Some people can not resist the temptation
    to tip over hives or even shoot at them. If your
    hives are located where they can easily be seen,
    you may be facing four legged problems.
  • Wouldnt you just love to see if the rocking
    hive rocks!

60
Summer Management
  • Low Ground flood danger
  • When you are looking for an out yard to put your
    bees, avoid low lying ground. Some people
    letting you use their land will give you an
    opportunity to place them away from any area that
    they use. Often this area is flood prone or hard
    to get to in the spring of the year because the
    ground is too soft to drive to the location.
  • All thats left after a flood.

61
Summer Management
  • And talking about pest..
  • Here are a few
  • Ants
  • Yellow Jackets
  • Mice
  • Skunks
  • Ratcoons
  • Snakes

62
Summer Management
  • Finally Strong hives get honey

63
Summer Management
  • Honey Plants during summer
  • Yellow White Sweet Clover
  • Basswood
  • Tulip Poplar
  • Sourwood
  • Field crops
  • Pumpkins
  • Pickles
  • Blueberries
  • Soybeans

64
Summer Management
  • Finis
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