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And it’s implications to beekeeping and Varroa mites Natural Cell Size

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And it’s implications to beekeeping and Varroa mites. Natural Cell Size. Presentations online. Before you take copious notes, all these presentations are online here: http://www.bushfarms.com/beespresentations.htm. Rick Nielsen of Cheap Trick. “Everything works if you let it”. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Natural Cell Size

–And it’s implications to beekeeping and Varroa mites

Natural Cell Size

Page 2: Natural Cell Size

Presentations online

Before you take copious notes, all these presentations are online here:

http://www.bushfarms.com/beespresentations.htm

Page 3: Natural Cell Size

“Everything works if you let it”

Rick Nielsen of Cheap Trick

Page 4: Natural Cell Size

Small Cell = Natural Cell?Small cell has been purported to

help control Varroa mites.

Small Cell is 4.9mm cell size.

Standard foundation is 5.4mm cell size.

What is natural cell size?

Page 5: Natural Cell Size

Baudoux 1893Made bees larger by using larger

cells. Pinchot, Gontarski and others got the size up as large as

5.74mm. But AI Root’s first foundation was 5 cells to an inch which is 5.08mm. Later he started making it 4.83 cells per inch. This

is equivalent to 5.26mm.(ABC XYZ of beekeeping 1945 edition page 125-126.)

Page 6: Natural Cell Size

Severide’s Law

“The leading cause of problems

is solutions.”

Page 7: Natural Cell Size

Typical Foundation Today

Page 8: Natural Cell Size

Dadant Wax 5.4mm

Page 9: Natural Cell Size

Dadant 4.9mm “Small Cell”

Page 10: Natural Cell Size

Plain Wax Sheet

Page 11: Natural Cell Size

Unregressed Top Bar Hive Comb 4.7mm

Page 12: Natural Cell Size

What I’ve done to get natural comb

• Top Bar Hives

Page 13: Natural Cell Size

Kenya Top Bar Hive

Page 14: Natural Cell Size

Kenya Top Bar Hive

Page 15: Natural Cell Size

What I’ve done to get natural comb

• Top Bar Hives• Foundationless Frames

Page 16: Natural Cell Size

Foundationless Frame

Page 17: Natural Cell Size

Foundationless Frame

Page 18: Natural Cell Size

What I’ve done to get natural comb

• Top Bar Hives• Foundationless Frames• Blank Starter Strips

Page 19: Natural Cell Size

Blank Starter Strip

Page 20: Natural Cell Size

What I’ve done to get natural comb

• Top Bar Hives• Foundationless Frames• Blank Starter Strips• Free Form Comb

Page 21: Natural Cell Size

What I’ve done to get natural comb

• Top Bar Hives• Foundationless Frames• Blank Starter Strips• Free Form Comb• Empty Frame Between Drawn Combs

Page 22: Natural Cell Size

How much difference between natural and “normal”?

When you figure this in one dimension, diameter, it doesn’t

sound like much. But how much is it in 3 dimensions?

Standard 5.43 = 157.464Small cell 4.93 = 117.649

Natural 4.63 = 97.336

Page 23: Natural Cell Size

Dimensions of cellsAccording to Baudoux

Cell Width Cell Volume5.555 mm 301 mm3

5.375 2775.210 2565.060 2374.925 2224.805 2064.700 192From ABC XYZ of Bee Culture 1945 edition pg 126

Page 24: Natural Cell Size

Things that affect cell size

• Worker intention for the comb at the time it was drawn:– Drone brood– Worker brood– Honey storage

• The size of the bees drawing the comb• The spacing of the top bars

Page 25: Natural Cell Size

What is Regression?• Large bees, from large cells, cannot build

natural sized cells. They build something in between. Most will build 5.1mm worker brood cells.

• The next brood cycle will build cells in the 4.9mm range.

• The only complication with converting back to Natural or Small cell is this need for regression.

Page 26: Natural Cell Size

Regressing

• To regress, cull out empty brood combs and let bees build what they want (or give them 4.9mm foundation)

• After they have raised brood on that, repeat the process.

Page 27: Natural Cell Size

Observations on natural cell size

• First there is no one size of cells nor one size of worker brood cells in a hive. Huber’s observations on bigger bees from bigger cells was directly because of this. The bees draw a variety of cell sizes which create a variety of bee sizes. Perhaps these different castes serve the purposes of the hive with more diversity of abilities.

Page 28: Natural Cell Size

Observations on cell size

• The first “generation” of bees from a typical hive (artificially enlarged bees) usually builds about 5.1mm cells for worker brood. This varies a lot, but typically this is the center of the brood nest. Some bees will go smaller faster.

Page 29: Natural Cell Size

Observations on Cell Size

The next generation of bees will build worker brood comb in the range of 4.9mm to 5.1mm with some smaller and some larger.

The spacing, if left to these “regressed” bees is typically

32mm or 1 ¼” in the center of the brood nest

Page 30: Natural Cell Size

1 ¼” spacing agrees with Huber’s Observations

The leaf or book hive consists of twelve vertical frames… and their breadth fifteen lines (one line= 1/12

of an inch. 15 lines = 1 ¼”). It is necessary that

this last measure should be accurate;

François Huber 1806

Page 31: Natural Cell Size

Comb Width by Cell SizeAccording to Baudoux

Cell Size mm Comb width mm5.555 22.605.375 22.205.210 21.805.060 21.404.925 21.004.805 20.604.700 20.20ABC XYZ of Bee Culture 1945 edition Pg 126

Page 32: Natural Cell Size

Spacing as close as 30mm in brood area

Page 33: Natural Cell Size

Comb spacing–Workers space comb based on their intended use. –Workers perceive the intended use based on spacing. –Worker brood area will be 1 ¼” (32mm)–Worker mixed with drone to will be 1 3/8” (35mm)–Honey storage 1 ½” (38mm) to 2”

Page 34: Natural Cell Size

Pre and Post capping times and Varroa

8 hours shorter capping time halves the number of Varroa infesting a brood cell.

8 hours shorter post capping time halves the number of offspring of a Varroa in the brood cell.

Page 35: Natural Cell Size

Accepted days for capping and Post Capping

(based on observing bees on 5.4mm comb)

Capped 9 days after egg layedEmerges 21 days after egg layed

Page 36: Natural Cell Size

Huber’s Observations on Natural Comb

Capped 8 days after egg layedEmerged 18.5 days after egg layed3(egg)+5(vermicular)+1.5(capping)+3(capped larva)+6(nymph)=18.5If the day the egg is layed is the first day then this would be half way through the twentieth day.

Page 37: Natural Cell Size

Huber’s Observations on Natural Comb

“The worm of workers passes three days in the egg, five in the vermicular state, and then the bees close up its cell with a wax covering. The worm now begins spinning its cocoon, in which operation thirty-six hours are consumed. In three days, it changes to a nymph, and passes six days in this form. It is only on the twentieth day of its existence, counting from the moment the egg is laid, that it attains the fly state.”

FRANCIS HUBER 4 September 1791.

Page 38: Natural Cell Size

My observations on 4.95mm cell size

Capped 8 days after layedEmerged 19 days after layed

Page 39: Natural Cell Size

Why would I want natural sized cells?

• Less Varroa Because:– Capping times shorter by 24 hours

• Less Varroa in the cell when it’s capped– Postcapping times shorter by 24 hours

• Less Varroa reach maturity and mate by emergence– More chewing out of Varroa

Page 40: Natural Cell Size

How to get natural sized cells.• Top bar hives.

– Make the bars 32mm (1 ¼”) for the brood area– Make the bars 38mm (1 ½”) for the honey area

• Foundationless frames.– Make a “comb guide” like Langstroth did (see

Langstroth’s Hive and the Honey-Bee”– Also helpful to cut down end bars to 1 ¼”

• Blank starter strips– Use a brine soaked board and dip it in wax to make

blank sheets. Cut these into ¾” wide strips and put in the frames.

– Also helpful to cut down end bars to 1 ¼”

Page 41: Natural Cell Size

How to get small cells

• Use 4.9mm foundation• Use 4.9mm Honey Super Cell (fully drawn)• Use 4.95mm Mann Lake PF100 or PF120• Use 4.9mm starter strips?

Page 42: Natural Cell Size

Small Cell Foundation

Page 43: Natural Cell Size

So what are natural sized cellsI have measured a lot of natural

drawn combs. I have seen worker brood in the range of 4.6mm to

5.1mm with most in the 4.7 to 4.8 ranges. I have not seen any large areas of 5.4mm cells. So I would

have to say:

Page 44: Natural Cell Size

ConclusionBased on my measurements of

natural worker brood comb:–There is nothing UNnatural about 4.9mm worker cells.–5.4mm worker cells are not the norm in a brood nest.–Small cell has been adequate for me to have hives that are stable against Varroa mites with no treatments.

Page 45: Natural Cell Size

Contact

Michael Bushbees at bushfarms dot comwww.bushfarms.comBook: The Practical Beekeeper

Page 46: Natural Cell Size
Page 47: Natural Cell Size

Let's assume a short term study (which all of them have been) during the drone rearing time of the year (which all of them have been) and make the assumption for the moment that Dee Lusby's "psuedodrone" theory is true, meaning that with large cell the Varroa often mistake large cell workers for drone cells and therefore infest them more. Then the Varroa in the large cell hives during that time would be less successful because they are in the wrong cells (worker). The Varroa, during that time would be more successful on the small cell because they are in the drone cells. But later in the year this may shift dramatically when, first of all the small cell workers have not taken damage from the Varroa and second of all the drone rearing drops off and the mites have nowhere to go.

Page 48: Natural Cell Size

–"Contradiction is not a sign of falsity, nor the lack of contradiction a sign of truth." --Blaise Pascal

–"All models are wrong, but some are useful" --George E.P. Box

Page 49: Natural Cell Size

Observations of Beekeepers vs Observations of Scientists

"It will be readily appreciated that in the course of many years and daily contact with bees, the professional bee-keeper will of necessity gain a knowledge and insight into the mysterious ways of the honeybee, usually denied to the scientist in the laboratory and the amateur in possession of a few colonies. Indeed, a limited practical experience will inevitably lead to views and conclusions, which are often completely at variance to the findings of a wide practical nature." --Beekeeping at Buckfast Abbey, Brother Adam

Page 50: Natural Cell Size

Quotes from conversation between Jennifer Berry, Michael

Bush, Dann Purvis and others

“If it's working for you, you should keep doing it.”--Jennifer Berry

“The criteria is easy, it's not about counting mites, it's about survival.”--Dann Purvis

Page 51: Natural Cell Size

Quote from Randy Oliver

“If you're not part of the genetic solution ofbreeding mite-tolerant bees, then you're part of

the problem”

Page 52: Natural Cell Size

QuestionIf natural/small cell size will control

Varroa, why did all the feral bees die off?

Answer

The problem is that this question typically comes with several

assumptions.

Page 53: Natural Cell Size

• The first assumption is that the feral bees have all but died out.

• I have not found this to be true. I see a lot of feral bees and I see more every year.

Page 54: Natural Cell Size

• The second assumption is that when some of the feral bees did die, that they all died from Varroa mites.

• A lot of things happened to the bees in this country including Tracheal mites, and viruses. I'm sure some of the survival from some of this is a matter of selection. The ones that couldn't withstand them died.

Page 55: Natural Cell Size

• The third assumption is that huge numbers of mites hitchhiking in on robbers can't overwhelm a hive no matter how well they handle Varroa.

• Tons of crashing domestic hives were bound to take a toll. Even if you have a fairly small and stable local population of Varroa, a huge influx from outside will overwhelm a hive.

Page 56: Natural Cell Size

• The fourth assumption is that a recently escaped swarm will build small cell.

• They will build something in between. For many years most of the feral bees were recent escapees. The population of feral bees was kept high by a lot of recent escapees and, in the past, those escapees often survived. It's only recently I've seen a shift in the population to be the dark bees rather than the Italians that look like they are recent. Large bees (bees from 5.4 mm foundation) build an in between sized comb, usually around 5.1 mm. So these recently swarmed domestic bees are not fully regressed and often die in the first year or two.

Page 57: Natural Cell Size

• The fifth assumption is that small cell beekeepers don't believe there is also a genetic component to the survival of bees with Varroa.

• Obviously there are bees that are more or less hygienic and more or less able to deal with many pests and diseases. Whenever a new disease or pest comes along the ferals have to survive them without any help.

Page 58: Natural Cell Size

• The sixth assumption is that the feral bees suddenly died.

• The bees have been diminishing for the last 50 years fairly steadily from pesticide misuse, loss of habitat and forage, and more recently from bee paranoia. People hear about AHB and kill any swarm they see.

Page 59: Natural Cell Size

Historic cell size measurements

1877 version of ABC of Beeculture, on page 147 says:

"The best specimens of true worker-comb, generally contain 5 cells within the space of an

inch, and therefore this measure has been adopted for the comb foundation."

Page 60: Natural Cell Size

• The 41st edition of ABC XYZ of Bee Culture on Page 160 (under Cell Size) says:

• "The size of naturally constructed cells has been a subject of beekeeper and scientific curiosity since Swammerdam measured them in the 1600s. Numerous subsequent reports from around the world indicate that the diameter of naturally constructed cells ranges from 4.8 to 5.4mm. Cell diameter varies between geographic areas, but the overall range has not changed from the 1600s to the present time."

Page 61: Natural Cell Size

• And further down on the same page:

• "reported cell size for Africanized honey bees averages 4.5-5.1mm."

Page 62: Natural Cell Size

• Marla Spivak and Eric Erickson in "Do measurements of worker cell size reliably distinguish Africanized from European honey bees (Apis mellifera L.)?" -- American Bee Journal v. April 1992, p. 252-255 says:

Page 63: Natural Cell Size

• "...a continuous range of behaviors and cell size measurements was noted between colonies considered "strongly European" and "strongly Africanized". "

Page 64: Natural Cell Size

• "Due to the high degree of variation within and among feral and managed populations of Africanized bees, it is emphasized that the most effective solution to the Africanized "problem", in areas where Africanized bees have established permanent populations, is to consistently select for the most gentle and productive colonies among the existing honey bee population"

Page 65: Natural Cell Size

• From: Identification and relative success of Africanized and European honey bees in Costa Rica. Spivak, M