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Monday, 24 June 2013

Scarecrow Candid - Keeping the Bee's

LR-3201 - Listening to a quiz show the other day and the question was who if affected by the Isle of Wight Disease (multiply choice answers). Answer Bee's
Acarapis woodi is a small parasitic mite that infests the airways of the honey bee. 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 being caused by a parasite until 1921. It quickly spread to the rest of Great Britain. It was regarded as having wiped out the entire native bee population of the British Isles (although later genetic studies have found remnants that did survive) and it dealt a devastating blow to British beekeeping. Brother Adam at the Buckfast Abbey developed a resistant hybrid bee known as the Buckfast bee, which is now available worldwide to combat acarine disease.

Diagnosis for tracheal mites generally involves the dissection and microscopic examination of a sample of bees from the hive.

Acarine mites, formerly known as tracheal mites are believed to have entered the US in 1984, via Mexico.

Mature female acarine mites leave the bee's airway and climb out on a hair of the bee, where they wait until they can transfer to a young bee. Once on the new bee, they will move into the airways and begin laying eggs.
citation

Taken during in the Gatcombe and Chillerton Scarecrow Festival the effort and quality of some of the scarecrows is amazing, the humour as well is brilliant, hats off to the people that do this every other year.

To view the flickr set from Gatcombe and Chilerton Scarecrow Festival click me to view a slide show of the set

Tags

scarecrows "scarecrow festival" gatcombe chilerton tea cake fun stroll walk Kuebiko hay-man decoy mannequin gallybagger Bird scarer day out village "isle of wight" Hodmedod Murmet "Tattie Bogal" "Tattie bogle" Bodach-rocais "old man of the rooks" Mommet Bwbach "Isle of Wight Disease" Acarapis woodi acarine bee bees keeper daisy grass dandelion

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