A study was carried out during May 1993. in southern England, on eight chemically untreated Apis mellifera L. colonies heavily inl~sted with Varroa jacobsoni ( 15-40% of worke, sealed brood). The position and time of capping of 3,228 worker sealed br~n)d were recorded. At two hour intervals, startin
Ontogenesis of the miteVarroa jacobsoniOud. in drone brood of the honeybeeApis melliferaL. under natural conditions
โ Scribed by S. J. Martin
- Publisher
- Springer Netherlands
- Year
- 1995
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 665 KB
- Volume
- 19
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0168-8162
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โฆ Synopsis
A study carded out during the summer of 1994, in southern England, investigated the developmental times and mortality of Varroa jacobsoni in Apis mellifera drone cells. The position and time of capping of 2671 naturally infested drone cells were recorded. Six hours after the cell was capped, 90% of the mites were free from the brood food~o start feeding on the developing drone. The developmental time of the mite's first three female offspring (133+_3 h) and the male offspring (150 h) and the intervals between egg laying (20-32 h) were similar to those found in worker cells. However, the mortality of the offspring was much lower in drone cells than worker cells. The mode numbers of eggs laid were six and five in drone and worker cells, respectively. All offspring had ample time to develop fully in drone cells with the sixth offspring reaching maturity approximately 1 day before the drone bee emerged. Normal mites (those which lay five or six viable eggs) produced on average four female adult offspring but since only around approximately 55% of the mite population produced viable offspring the mean number of viable adult female offspring per total number of mother mites was 2 to 2.2 in drone cells.
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