BIBBA can provide speakers for beekeepers’ meetings and conventions on a variety of topics. Please contact the secretary, John Hendrie, 26 Coldharbour Lane,
Hildenborough, Tonbridge, Kent TN11 9JT, 01732 833894
Workshops
BIBBA can run workshops providing hands-on experience of colony assessment, morphometry, and/or queen raising, tailored to the requirements of a particular group of beekeepers.
Report on a queen raising workshop held by BIBBA East Midlands Group, Thrumpton, Notts., June 28th 2003:
It was easy to find the Village Hall with all the signs and directions and the welcome with refreshments was very hospitable.
The day being split into grafting, preparing colonies to acept graft preparation and filling of nucs and colony assessment was extremely well organised, absorbing, and full of interest.
Personally I found the grafting difficult being rather clumsy with poor depth perception but finally achieved a graft with some relief. The rest was great fun and the bees so well behaved in spite of
frequent manipulation and the weather was warm and pleasant which suited the business in hand admirably.
The keenness of the demonstrators and their obvious belief in their quest for improving the British black bee was refreshing and infectious and their expertise was so apparent, which all in all gave me a very
enjoyable day.
I left in the late afternoon with my grafted larva (which I am pleased is progressing very favourably in its nuc) feeling impressed and well satisfied.
Thank you BIBBA East Midlands Group for a well organised and enjoyable day.
George Marsh
Conferences
BIBBA normally holds a Conference every two years, sometimes in conjunction with another organisation such as SICAMM (see links) which includes presentations by scientists and bee experts of international
standing, visits and demonstrations.. The next conference is planned for summer 2006 in England.
The 2004 Conference was held jointly with SICAMM on the Danish island of Laesoe, home of a unique strain of Dark European Honeybee:
Laesoe Conference 2004
Ten delegates from Ireland and the UK decided to approach the Danish island of Læsø, venue of the 2004 SICAMM/BIBBA Dark Bee Conference, from Gothenburg in Sweden. The chosen conveyance,
Mr.Börjeson’s “sea taxi”, provided an efficient though very choppy passage. Once on the island we joined other BIBBA members along with dark bee enthusiasts from Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Latvia, Finland,
Poland, Austria and Switzerland, including many old friends. The Conference was based around the Gammelgaard leisure centre amid fields and woods near the centre of the island.
Læsø (pronounced approximately “lesser”) is 20km long and 10km at its widest. It is mostly flat with a few sand dunes, and was formerly heavily forested. The forests were eliminated by the late middle ages,
largely for use as fuel in the island’s saltworks, leaving areas of heather moor and saltmarsh with its distictive flora, along with agricultural land. A single salt works survives, still run on medieval lines, of which we
had a fascinating tour. In modern times large parts of the island have been reforested with coniferous woodland. Other attractions are the single-storeyed farmhouses, some still thatched with seaweed, and
birdwatching.
To bee breeders of course, islands mean mating isolation. The Danish speakers at the Conference explained that Læsø was declared a conservation area for the Dark Bee, Apis mellifera mellifera in 1993, with
only Dark Bees allowed and no imports permitted. A queen rasing programme was started. A few beekeepers questioned the basis of the regulation, but after several years of battles the European Court and
local courts finally declared the conservation area legal. A change of government brought a new minister of agriculture (now responsible for agriculture in the whole of the EU!) who was basically against the
conservation. A ministry report concluded that the conservation of the dark bee was justified, but proposed several alternative solutions:
- 1. The status quo as a conservation area;
- 2. A protected mating station in the east of the island with all races allowed on other parts;
- 3. Suspension of the conservation area but keep a Dark Bee mating station;
- 4. Abolish the protection of the Dark Bee completely. The ministry proposed to implement solution 2, but had not actually done so at the time of the Conference.
The Danish Beekeepers’ Association and many individuals doubt the legality of the government’s decision and continue to campaign for the whole of Læsø as a Dark Bee conservation area. Our conservation
officer Dorian Pritchard gave an interview on Danish television to present a BIBBA point of view.
At present there are some 30 beekeepers keeping 250 dark bee colonies on the island, and seven others with 200 colonies of crosses. On the Danish mainland, bees are mainly hybrids, with some Buckfast
breeders. On Læsø no varroa has been found to date, though tracheal mite exists.
A tour of the island included a visit to a Dark Bee apiary with about a dozen trough hives of the type found right across the North European plain into Russia. Figs. 2 and 3 will give an idea of the extreme docility,
non-jumpiness and steadiness of the bees on the comb. It was the same in Sweden 2000 and Poland 2002; and yet we still see the dark bee castigated for its bad temper! Cool-air clustering for heat conservation,
a well-known Dark Bee character, was also demonstrated (Fig. 3).
In a short but packed programme of talks, Danish researcher Klaus Langschwager gave some observations on the mating behaviour of the Danish dark bee, which is better adapted to the heather than other
races and gives the best crops. Drones are produced early in large numbers, are full of semen and are kept in the hives very late. Thus the race is well placed to maintain its genetic presence even with other
races around. Queens are often raised in August or later when no yellow drones are about. Experiments showed that introducing dark Danish queens into Carniolan and Italian colonies is difficult. Workers of
these two latter races often build queencells even when an introduced A.m.m. queen is laying, and will remove her eggs from the cells.
Nils Drivdal from Norway sketched out his view of the long-term history of bees in Northern Europe. The forests in which honey hunting and log hive beekeeping were practised in prehistoric times were in many
areas cleared and replaced by heather moors (as on Læsø). Thus log hives were replaced by skeps, and heather/skep management favoured swarmy bees - which were actually imported into Sweden from at
least the 15th century. When sugar became cheap and movable-frame hives were adopted, swarminess fell out of favour again. Thus the bees have continually been selected by both nature and man in various
directions.
Dr. Dorian Pritchard gave a talk on the new tools and new approaches in bee genetics pioneered by Prof. Bo Vest Pedersen and colleagues at Copenhagen University, focussing on DNA-based technology.
He showed how these techniques had been applied to honeybees in the UK. He also gave a short report on conservation activities in the UK. Bo Vest Pedersen himself explored the DNA techniques in greater
detail, showing how they have recently revolutionised all kinds of biological studies. Nuclear DNA in the chromosomes can tell us something about the genotype of the father and the mother and is therefore useful
in establishing paternity and analysing gene flow (hybridisation) and inbreeding. Mitochondrial DNA is transmitted through maternal lines without recombination. Offspring, female and male, have exactly the same
mDNA as the mother. Therefore it is useful in descriptions of evolutionary history.
Research has shown that it is obvious that the Dark Bee differs from other bees, and must have split off perhaps half to one million years ago. Because of this early differentiation it has developed more variation
and local strains than any other subspecies. A recent finding is that the Iberian bee of Spain and Portugal is not a subspecies, but a hybrid between A.m.mellifera and A.m.intermissa (the North African honeybee).
Prof. Pedersen’s colleague Dr. Annette Bruun Jensen, who started her career in forensic DNA but has moved from tracking down criminals to investigating bee genes, gave further details on genetic investigations
into A.m.m. populations in Norway, Sweden, Denmark, England, Scotland and Ireland. Some introgression of genes from commercial Italian strains was observed in all of them, the most introgressed being the
Læsø bees.
Ole Herz of Danish Arctic Ecological Research brought us up to date on progress in the establishment of beekeeping in South Greenland since his previous talk in 2000. Three private apiaries have now been
established and an apiary for experiments and education. Beekeeping is now self-sustaining and a viable source of additional income for the local sheep farmers.
From Ireland, Micheál Ma Giolla Coda reported on the activities of the Galtee Bee Breeding Group (see elsewhere in this issue). Dr.Jacob Kahn discussed his work on beewing morphometry based on 40
colonies in the Irish Republic. He has applied some sophisticated statistical techniques to explore, for example, the close correlation between discoidal shift and cubital index. By analysing the differences
between the morphometry of left and right wings he claims to be able to use the results in partitionaing the phenotype (physical form of the bee) into genetic and environmental components.
Andrew Abrahams from Scotland illustrated the background, geography, climate, topography and flora of the island of Colonsay where he keeps some 60 stocks of A.m.mellifera which have been isolated for 20
years from their nearest neighbours 15 km away. After many years of isolation breeding a very uniform population has resulted which is procuctive in a very harsh environment, fairly gentle and with few disease
problems. The lecture highlighted the problems of stock improvement and avoidance of inbreeding from the strictly practical point of view of a man who depends only on his bees and oyster farming for his
livelihood.
From Switzerland Balser Fried described the situation of the dark bee in his country: it makes up 90,000 of the total 200,000 colonies. The A.m.m. Association has 180 members who make use of both 25 regional
(non-isolated) and five isolated alpine mating stations, mating some 6,000 queens per annum. Breeding stock is selected on behavioural and morphometric criteria. One canton, Glarus in the east of the country,
has granted A.m.m. protected status; the federal govenment has refused to extend this status nationwide but has recognised A.m.m. as an endangered subspecies and supports certain programmes related to it.
The other bees kept in Switzerland are Carniolans, Italians and Buckfasts.
Other presentations were given from Latvia, Poland, Austria and Sweden, updating information presented in 2000 and 2002.
It was heartening to see the continuing widely-based support for the Dark European Bee, and especially the cooperation between beekeepers, amateur and commercial, and scientists. The papers will be
published in due course.
After Mr.Börjeson’s prognostications on the weather, for the return trip the Irish delegates decided to fly direct to Copenhagen by light aircraft, and the UK party by car ferry to Gothenburg via the Danish mainland.
Such are the complications of travelling to small islands - in this case well worth the trouble.
Philip Denwood