 |
|
 |
Apiary - a yard where behives are kept | A Wisdom Archive on Apiary - a yard where behives are kept |  | Apiary - a yard where behives are kept A selection of articles related to Apiary - a yard where behives are kept |  |
 | |
Africanized bee, Africanized bee - Aggressiveness, Africanized bee - Avoid perfume, cologne and scented cosmetics, Africanized bee - Behavioral evidence, Africanized bee - Beware of head-butting bees, Africanized bee - Difficulty in determination, Africanized bee - Effects of selective breeding, Africanized bee - Genetic evidence, Africanized bee - Gentle Africanized bees, Africanized bee - Geographic limits, Africanized bee - Geographic spread, Africanized bee - How to avoid bees, Africanized bee - In the African Bee natural selection, Africanized bee - In the European Bee intentional selection, Africanized bee - Open air hives, Africanized bee - Queen management in Africanized bee areas, Africanized bee - The Assassin Bee?, Africanized bee - The danger to apiculture, Africanized bee - The lore, Africanized bee - Use caution with power mowers, Africanized bee - Walk with care in clover and near picnic sites, Africanized bee - Water meter chambers, Africanized bee - Wear light colors, <strong>Africanized bee</strong> - a hybrid bee with characteristics unsuitable for beekeeping., Apiary - a yard where behives are kept, Apitherapy - human therapy using bee venom, Bee - a member of the family that includes ants, wasps, and termites, Bee anatomy (mouth), Bee learning and communication, Bee sting, Bee venom therapy - also called apitherapy, Beehive - a housing for cavity-dwelling bees that allows inspection and honey removal, Beekeeping - bees are kept for their products (principally honey), and their utility in pollenating crops, Beekeeping leading practices - newer techniques of beekeeping, Brood (honeybee) - the egg, larval, and pupal form of the bee and the comb in which they develop, Buckfast hybrid bee - a productive bee suitable for damp and cloudy climes., Characteristics of common wasps and bees, Deseret - the beehive and its symbolism to the Church of Later-Day Saints (Mormons), Drone bee - the male bee, Diseases of the honeybee, Honeybee - bees particularly suitable for use in apiculture, Honeybee life cycle - the physical stages in the development of a mature bee starting from the egg, Laying worker bee - this worker will produce only drone bees, Langstroth_hive - commonly seen in developed countries as stacks of white boxes at the edges of fields and orchards, List of honeybee races, Pesticide toxicity to bees, Piping queen - queens will make audible sounds at certain times, Stingless bees - Trigona and Melipona bees kept from ancient times in Central America and Australia, Swarming - the means by which bee colonies propagate, Supercedure - replacement of a reigning queen by her workers, Queen bee - a single egg laying bee capable of producing workers, drones, and queens, Top-bar hive - an alternative to the Langsthroth box hive, with some advantages for casual beekeeping, Virgin queen - A queen that has not yet bred with drones, Western honeybee European honeybees, Worker bee - the many tasks performed by this class of bee during her short lifetime and her specialized single-use stinger
|  | | Page 1 Page 2 » Page 3 « More » |  |
 | |
| ARTICLES RELATED TO Apiary - a yard where behives are kept |  |  |  | Apiary - a yard where behives are kept: Encyclopedia II - Diseases of the honeybee - Wax mothsMain article: Waxworm
Galleria mellonella (greater wax moths) will not attack the bees directly, but feed on the wax used by the bees to build their honeycomb. Their full development to adults requires access to used brood comb or brood cell cleanings — these contain protein essential for the larvae's development, in the form of brood coocoons.
The destruction of the comb will spil ...
See also:Diseases of the honeybee, Diseases of the honeybee - Varroa mites, Diseases of the honeybee - Preventive Measures and Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - Acarine Tracheal mites, Diseases of the honeybee - Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - American foulbrood AFB, Diseases of the honeybee - Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - European foulbrood EFB, Diseases of the honeybee - Chalkbrood, Diseases of the honeybee - Nosema, Diseases of the honeybee - Dysentery, Diseases of the honeybee - Small hive beetle, Diseases of the honeybee - Wax moths, Diseases of the honeybee - Control and Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - Chilled brood, Diseases of the honeybee - Stonebrood, Diseases of the honeybee - Kashmir Bee Virus, Diseases of the honeybee - Black Queen Cell Virus BQCV, Diseases of the honeybee - Pesticide losses Read more here: » Diseases of the honeybee: Encyclopedia II - Diseases of the honeybee - Wax moths |
|  |
|  |  |  | Apiary - a yard where behives are kept: Encyclopedia II - Diseases of the honeybee - NosemaNosema apis is a spore-forming parasite that invades the intestinal tracts of adult bees and causes nosema disease. Nosema is also associated with Black queen-cell virus. Nosema is normally only a problem when the bees can not leave the hive to eliminate waste (for example, during an extended cold spell in winter or when the hives are enclosed in a wintering barn). When the bees are unable to void (cleansing flights), they can develop dysentery.
Nosema is treated by increasing the ventilation through the hive. ...
See also:Diseases of the honeybee, Diseases of the honeybee - Varroa mites, Diseases of the honeybee - Preventive Measures and Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - Acarine Tracheal mites, Diseases of the honeybee - Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - American foulbrood AFB, Diseases of the honeybee - Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - European foulbrood EFB, Diseases of the honeybee - Chalkbrood, Diseases of the honeybee - Nosema, Diseases of the honeybee - Dysentery, Diseases of the honeybee - Small hive beetle, Diseases of the honeybee - Wax moths, Diseases of the honeybee - Control and Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - Chilled brood, Diseases of the honeybee - Stonebrood, Diseases of the honeybee - Kashmir Bee Virus, Diseases of the honeybee - Black Queen Cell Virus BQCV, Diseases of the honeybee - Pesticide losses Read more here: » Diseases of the honeybee: Encyclopedia II - Diseases of the honeybee - Nosema |
|  |
|  |  |  | Apiary - a yard where behives are kept: Encyclopedia II - Diseases of the honeybee - ChalkbroodAscophaera apis is a fungal disease infests the gut of the larva. The fungus will compete with the larva for food, ultimately causing it to starve. The fungus will then go on to consume the rest of the larva's body, causing it to appear white and 'chalky'.
Chalkbrood is often considered another "stress" disease because the fungal spores are always present but are manageable by an otherwise healthy colony. Chalkbrood is most commonly visible during wet springs. Hives with Chalkbrood can generally be recovered by increasing the vent ...
See also:Diseases of the honeybee, Diseases of the honeybee - Varroa mites, Diseases of the honeybee - Preventive Measures and Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - Acarine Tracheal mites, Diseases of the honeybee - Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - American foulbrood AFB, Diseases of the honeybee - Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - European foulbrood EFB, Diseases of the honeybee - Chalkbrood, Diseases of the honeybee - Nosema, Diseases of the honeybee - Dysentery, Diseases of the honeybee - Small hive beetle, Diseases of the honeybee - Wax moths, Diseases of the honeybee - Control and Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - Chilled brood, Diseases of the honeybee - Stonebrood, Diseases of the honeybee - Kashmir Bee Virus, Diseases of the honeybee - Black Queen Cell Virus BQCV, Diseases of the honeybee - Pesticide losses Read more here: » Diseases of the honeybee: Encyclopedia II - Diseases of the honeybee - Chalkbrood |
|  |
|  |  |  | Apiary - a yard where behives are kept: Encyclopedia II - Diseases of the honeybee - Acarine Tracheal mitesAcarapis woodi is a small parasitic mite that infests the airways of the honeybee. The first known infestation of the mites occurred in the British Isles in the early 20th century. First observed on the Isle of Wight in 1904, the mystery illness known as Isle of Wight Disease was not identified as caused by a parasite until 1921. It quickly spread to the rest of Great Britain. It was regarded as having wiped out the entire bee population of the isles (later genetic studies have found remnants that did survive) and dealt a devas ...
See also:Diseases of the honeybee, Diseases of the honeybee - Varroa mites, Diseases of the honeybee - Preventive Measures and Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - Acarine Tracheal mites, Diseases of the honeybee - Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - American foulbrood AFB, Diseases of the honeybee - Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - European foulbrood EFB, Diseases of the honeybee - Chalkbrood, Diseases of the honeybee - Nosema, Diseases of the honeybee - Dysentery, Diseases of the honeybee - Small hive beetle, Diseases of the honeybee - Wax moths, Diseases of the honeybee - Control and Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - Chilled brood, Diseases of the honeybee - Stonebrood, Diseases of the honeybee - Kashmir Bee Virus, Diseases of the honeybee - Black Queen Cell Virus BQCV, Diseases of the honeybee - Pesticide losses Read more here: » Diseases of the honeybee: Encyclopedia II - Diseases of the honeybee - Acarine Tracheal mites |
|  |
|  |  |  | Apiary - a yard where behives are kept: Encyclopedia II - Diseases of the honeybee - American foulbrood AFBPaenibacillus larvae (formerly classified as Bacillus larvae) is a spore-forming bacterium. This disease only affects the bee larvae but is highly infectious and deadly to bees. Infected larvae will darken and die. Lab testing is necessary for definitive diagnosis, but a good field test is to touch a dead larva with a toothpick or twig. It will will be sticky and "ropey" (drawn out). Foulbrood also has a characteristic odor, and experienced beekeepers with a good sense of smell, can often detect the disease upon opening a hive. ...
See also:Diseases of the honeybee, Diseases of the honeybee - Varroa mites, Diseases of the honeybee - Preventive Measures and Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - Acarine Tracheal mites, Diseases of the honeybee - Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - American foulbrood AFB, Diseases of the honeybee - Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - European foulbrood EFB, Diseases of the honeybee - Chalkbrood, Diseases of the honeybee - Nosema, Diseases of the honeybee - Dysentery, Diseases of the honeybee - Small hive beetle, Diseases of the honeybee - Wax moths, Diseases of the honeybee - Control and Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - Chilled brood, Diseases of the honeybee - Stonebrood, Diseases of the honeybee - Kashmir Bee Virus, Diseases of the honeybee - Black Queen Cell Virus BQCV, Diseases of the honeybee - Pesticide losses Read more here: » Diseases of the honeybee: Encyclopedia II - Diseases of the honeybee - American foulbrood AFB |
|  |
|  |  |  | Apiary - a yard where behives are kept: Encyclopedia II - Diseases of the honeybee - European foulbrood EFBMelissococcus pluton is a bacterial brood disease that infests the guts of bee larvae. European foulbrood is less deadly than American foulbrood. European foulbrood does not form spores, though it can overwinter on comb.
European foulbrood is often considered a "stress" disease - a disease that is dangerous only if the colony is already under stress for other reasons. An otherwise healthy colony can usually survive European foulbrood. An outbreak of the disease may be controlled chemically with oxytetracycline hydrochloride. Prophylati ...
See also:Diseases of the honeybee, Diseases of the honeybee - Varroa mites, Diseases of the honeybee - Preventive Measures and Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - Acarine Tracheal mites, Diseases of the honeybee - Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - American foulbrood AFB, Diseases of the honeybee - Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - European foulbrood EFB, Diseases of the honeybee - Chalkbrood, Diseases of the honeybee - Nosema, Diseases of the honeybee - Dysentery, Diseases of the honeybee - Small hive beetle, Diseases of the honeybee - Wax moths, Diseases of the honeybee - Control and Treatment, Diseases of the honeybee - Chilled brood, Diseases of the honeybee - Stonebrood, Diseases of the honeybee - Kashmir Bee Virus, Diseases of the honeybee - Black Queen Cell Virus BQCV, Diseases of the honeybee - Pesticide losses Read more here: » Diseases of the honeybee: Encyclopedia II - Diseases of the honeybee - European foulbrood EFB |
|  |
|  | | Page 1 Page 2 » Page 3 « More » |  |
 | |
|
|