Building a better bee

A 79-year-old Englishman whose bees resist Varroa mites is part of a wave of hope for global food security

by Tom Henheffer on Thursday, October 7, 2010 2:00pm - 0 Comments
Building a better bee

Jon Rowley/SWNS.COM

Every morning at about nine, Ron Hoskins slips into his white beekeepers outfit, pulls trays out from beneath 17 of his 50 buzzing apiaries in a conservation park in Swindon, England, and painstakingly sorts through the contents with a magnifying glass. He goes home at five, and he’s often up until 2 a.m. examining his finds under a microscope. “It keeps me going,” says the 79-year-old retired heating engineer. Hoskins, who has a “beekeepers do it better” sign in his office, took up apiculture during the Second World War when he was evacuated to a country school. He’s done it ever since. His current research started when worldwide bee populations began to collapse in the mid-’90s; since then numbers have fallen by up to 60 per cent in some countries. With a full third of our diet derived from insect-pollinated plants, the decline in bee populations could be devastating to global food security. But, after more than a decade of careful breeding, Hoskins thinks he’s got the answer.

He’s hopeful because of what’s lying in the bottom of his trays: dead varroa mites, tiny parasites that latch onto the necks of bees, feeding on their blood and transmitting diseases in the process. The mites usually destroy any hive they infect and, since they started to spread from Asia in the 1960s, have arguably become the biggest threat to bee populations around the globe. “It’s quite scary,” says Chris Deaves, an executive with the British Beekeepers Association (BBKA). But Hoskins has managed to naturally make 17 of his 50 colonies mite-resistant, an achievement scientists such as Leonard Foster, a biologist at the University of British Columbia, are calling a major breakthrough. “If the bees are able to deal with varroa mites to a level where they need no human intervention,” Foster says, “they have the potential to reverse the decline in numbers.”

Beekeepers have been fighting mites with chemicals, but that harms hives and is often ineffective, especially since varroa are beginning to develop a resistance to pesticides. Hoskins discontinued their use around the time he noticed dead mites starting to pile up underneath some of his hives. He soon realized that those colonies were full of bees with a very advantageous ability: they could tell when varroa were infecting other workers, and they seemed to be helping their neighbours by killing off the mites.

Hoskins monitored the colonies and selectively bred them to spread the genetic advantage. Then, a few years later, he noticed white bits of bee larva on the piles in his trays. At first he thought the hives were infected with a new disease, but the colonies had actually developed an even stronger resistance: instead of just removing varroa from adults, the bees were also destroying larvae once they became infected with mite eggs, making it much harder for the mites to breed. “If we can interrupt that life cycle,” he says, “we’ve really done major damage. We were elated.”

Other beekeepers are working to the same end. Rob Currie, an entomologist with the University of Manitoba, has been selectively breeding bees for eight years, and created a strain that can also remove the mites from other adults, while Marla Spivak, an apiculture professor at the University of Minnesota, has just been awarded a $500,000 MacArthur grant for creating her own strain of mite-resistant bee. Researchers with the U.S. Department of Agriculture have made a similar breakthrough, as have German scientists. And bees that keep hives clean by constantly removing corpses—making it more difficult for disease to spread—are being bred at Sussex University in the U.K.

But Currie notes genetic advantages come with a trade-off. “They’re putting energy into grooming,” he explains, which can lead to a drop in honey production, making the insects less effective pollinators. “If it can’t produce honey it doesn’t have much usefulness.”

Also, because mating is very difficult to control in bees, both Foster and Deaves say there’s no guarantee the new traits will be passed on to the general population. Beekeepers in Germany have already tried and failed. But Deaves believes Hoskins has a different method that could work. “His approach is to try and do a small area well, as opposed to spreading it over a large area thinly,” he says.

The BBKA has given Hoskins $9,800 to create a batch of small, reusable nucleus hives, which will be sent to other beekeepers to establish new, stronger colonies. Once those colonies take root, the hives will be sent back, starting the routine over. It’s a slow process, but Hoskins hopes his work will someday restart the British population of feral bees—now almost non-existent—and eventually help end varroa’s stranglehold on bee numbers worldwide. “It will take years,” he says, “but this is the turnaround.”

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  • Avid_Reader

    Gotta hand it to the backyard scientist! I hope everyone involved keeps up the good work. It says he's been working on this for more than a decade…thats some real dedication!

  • Bruce Voigt

    quote
    Having my outside coffee I was pleased to see a honey bee.
    It flew around inspecting branches that have yet to produce flowers then lit on the ground about six feet from me. It inspected about one square inch then was still for about five minutes moving just enough to turn itself around. For the next hour there was no movement and I assumed that it had died.

    It did not and it now sits on my table in a clear glass jar. It has been ravishingly feeding on a chunk of honey and now seems normal. Intermittently it flies around the jar looking for a way out then gets right back to the honey.
    more

    • Bruce Voigt

      In regards to the disappearance of large number of bees in the southern USA I believe that disturbed hibernation to be the problem. The bees programed out of season to forage would not find food and probably starved to death away from the hive.I thought a solution to this would be to enclose the hive through hibernation but its now being reported and shown that Canadian bees are found dead in the hive. These hives were probably covered over with snow most of the winter.
      It was shown that carcasses were found in their individual hexagon cubical. Did they eat their way out of house and home to starve, if this is so, then the solution is to make sure an artificial food source is available. In parts of Canada where severe cold persists, bees have been known to form a ball in their hibernation. In this situation I believe that most would not be subjected to multiple radiation exposure that is causing the on and off of hibernation. Along with food supplement it will probably be found that the bee in warmer areas will have to be contained and the bee in colder areas moved inside and provided warmth.

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  • http://osmungifts.com Gail O

    The fact that 1/3 of our diet is derived from insect-pollinated plants is mind boggling. In areas, where the bees have died off, humans have tried and failed to pollinate fruit trees. It takes too long and is not effective.

  • Dr Reese Halter

    This is certainly excellent news. In addition we need to focus on stopping use of systemic insecticides, in particular neonictinoids. These potent insecticides are killing billions of bees and moths, destroying beneficial soil insects and contaminating waterways as I have recently written about on Huffington Post green blog http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dr-reese-halter/neo…

  • Bruce Voigt

    I had planned on setting the bee free the following morning but it had turned cold so dug out a large clear glass mixing bowl, some foliage, another chunk of honey and some water.

    The bee spent the day trying to find a way out interrupted with the odd tantrum, rest and snack of honey. At about 4 pm it settled on the foliage and after a while with no movement figured it was finished for the day.

    It is now the third morning with no movement since 4 pm yesterday. It is either dead or in hibernation. If it turns out that this bee is in fact in hibernation then this will have been a valuable experiment.

    It had consumed the first chunk (about 1/2 tsp) of honey the first day, the second chunk has been hardly touched.

  • Bruce Voigt

    The bee awoke yesterday morning at about 10 am. I wonder if 18 hrs would be classed as hibernation. It spent the day preening, snacking, snoozing and looking for a way out.

    Its now 7 am and the bee emerged from the foliage, stretched, preened, a little snack all within about three min then plopped back into hibernation beside the honey. There is no need to add any honey as the second block is lasting.

    It is obvious to me that Bees have over time evolved to cope with disturbed hibernation by producing extra food.

    I would suggest funded people with lab equipment get right on with coming up with an artificial food supplement.

  • Bruce Voigt

    BEE EXPERIMENT

    Watching a Bee Keeper at work, ever wonder why it takes so little smoke to calm the Bee's.

    The Bee has adapted to survive forest fires. They simply go into Hibernation when smoke is detected.

    Their hive is deep into the tree and in most cases will not be effected by smoke, fire or heat and by hibernation they survive.

    I have discovered that buzz, my new pet, was programed by radiation change caused by erratic Earth tipping to come out of hibernation. His instinct would be to leave the hive and forage.

    This is day five of capture and buzz is acting normal except for intermittent hibernation.

    There is no doubt that Buzz would not have survived and I think the conditions here are now that of the southern USA at the time their Bees went missing.

    In a nut shell– They went out foraging and with not finding food fell asleep and starved.

    Canadian bees were programed to come out of hibernation and froze to death.

  • Bruce Voigt

    Day 23 and still no indication that Buzz is shedding winter hibernation. The last couple of days has had me both worried and relieved as yesterday and this Am so little time (30 seconds) was taken to feed before again zonking out.

    A bear in HIBERNATION is nourished by its fat.

    This BEE experiment has shown that the bee in HIBERNATION (for its nutrition) must periodically partially awaken to feed on stored honey.

    My pet Buzz was let go with disastrous results. I had taken the time to constantly present my finger for it to get used to my scent as I would be releasing it in my home. I was taking a chance that it would really like me or hate me.

    The big day came and in releasing Buzz it flew around coming back to land on my finger then over to feed on its honey. This nice experience went on for a couple hrs and I felt that I truly had a new pet.

    The sound of buzz had ceased for some time and I assumed it had retired some were for a snooze. A day went by and I assumed it went back into hibernation or some how found its way out. I had turned on the gas stove and to my horror heard buzz with in the stove. end of sad experiment

  • Bruce Voigt

    Pollination is all about the distribution of the species’ aura.

    This coming late July, August or early September will indicate to me whether or not Mother Nature lets up on us. If not, such things as to replace Bees must be immediately considered.

    Expanding air molecules could replace the Bee in pollinating crops!
    cbc.ca bruce voigt

  • http://mergerlawassociates.com Julius C

    Great to hear, considering the extreme importance of bees.

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