Shropshire Beekeepers' Association

 

 

Newsletter : September 2008

 

1.      Editor's Notes

It is nearing the end of August and the honey-gathering season is finishing - except for those who look for a late crop from borage or heather. The advice from the Inspectorate now is to assume that your colonies will have pyrethroid-resistant varroa mites that are untreatable with Bayverol or Apistan. [You may prefer to confirm this by doing a ‘Beltsville’ test before consigning these effective treatments to history. Further details of this test can be found in the Newsletter for September 2006 or downloaded direct from the CSL website. Consequently you need to complete the 6-week treatment with such as Apiguard while the ambient temperature is at least 16°C. This puts late forage harvests under pressure. It would be interesting to hear from members who still take such a crop about how they manage subsequent varroa control.

As far as the success of this season is concerned, the reports I read from around the country seem to suggest that bees have done quite well but that surplus stores are relatively meagre. The indifferent summer weather has been a critical factor here. That certainly reflects my own experience. I have been able to increase the number of stocks and build them up to a healthy autumn level. However, even the ‘mature’ colonies have produced low surplus yields. To add insult to injury, the bees in one such colony managed to get back into the supers after I had put on the clearer board (the curse of the WBC) and, overnight, emptied them out and took the honey down into the brood chamber!

For those of you who have not heard the news, RBI Jo Schupp has reported that EFB has been identified in OS square SJ50 and AFB in SJ32. She has aimed to inspect all known colonies in these areas to check if these are just isolated incidents. If you have any bees in either of these squares and have not yet contacted Jo you should do so as soon as possible (details on p8). My own bees were checked out at the beginning of the month and, while there was evidence of chalk brood and varroa damage, they were otherwise clear.

The National Audit Office is carrying out an audit of the Bee Health Inspection Service and is asking all beekeepers with access to the internet to complete a short on-line survey. The deadline for completion is the 5th September.

 

2.      October AGM

Our AGM will be on October 8th when the Committee for the coming year will be elected. Please use this nomination paper to put forward your own name or that of anyone else you know would be willing to help run the Association’s affairs. Committee meetings are held about every 8 weeks so the commitment is not onerous. (All current committee members are reminded that they also need to confirm their willingness to stand by nominating themselves again). N.B. We particularly need nominations for a new treasurer. Roger Evans has ably filled this role over a number of years but has been clearly indicating for some time that he will no longer be available. Given that the Association has over 120 members there must be someone who can take over from him. The qualities needed are organisational rather than financial and help and support will be given as needed. PLEASE GIVE THIS YOUR SERIOUS CONSIDERATION.

 

3.      Shrewsbury Flower Show 2008.

It does not seem 12 months since the last Show, but as I write this, the 2008 Show has been over 3 days.

In some ways this year was similar to last, as a number of beekeepers did not have either the honey to enter the classes in the competition or have it available for tasting and sale. However it was good to have a variety for the many visitors to sample. Over 8000 'tastes' were taken over the two days! We ran out by mid-afternoon on Saturday.

As in previous years, I would like to pass on our thanks to all those who helped during the set up of the show, during the show and also in clearing up afterwards. This included members of SBKA, NSBKA and Shrewsbury Wine Circle. The Show is a team event and showcases beekeeping and wine - making in Shropshire. We can always do with more help so why not plan ahead - next year’s Show will be on August 14th & 15th.
Ray Green

 

4.      Apiary Activities  

One important focus of apiary activities during the summer has been the raising of queens. Robert Swallow has organised colonies so that they could either be sources for suitable eggs or for raising the subsequent larvae. The intention was to create viable nuclei that could be made available to our new members. Like most apiaries ours was still suffering the effects of a difficult season last year and it therefore took longer to create the ideal conditions for this process than would normally be the case. However, those members who attended these apiary meetings learned a lot about how they can use the same techniques with their own colonies. An account of the success of this programme will be included in the next edition. In the meantime, the photographs below will give you a little of the flavour.





Inspecting frames to judge the state of the colony





Hi-tech egg search!



The bees checking out a frame of eggs







The last apiary meeting of the season will be on Saturday 13th September at 2.30 p.m. when the topic will be: Preparing the bees for winter

 

5.      Advice on Removing and Extracting the Honey Crop
        Peter Edwards: Stratford-upon-Avon Newsletter August 08(Courtesy BEES)

I do not intend to go through the whole process, but here are some thoughts:

Remove honey in the morning before the bees have had a chance to bring in fresh nectar. Remember that honey does NOT have to be capped to be ‘ripe’.

Break supers apart a few days before removing the crop and remove any brace comb between them (put it on the crownboard for the bees to clean up); this will avoid dripping honey when you remove the crop.

Be particularly careful to avoid blowing ash on to the honey when smoking supers.

Honey is hygroscopic (attracts water), so do not remove honey before you are ready to extract. If you cannot extract immediately, store the supers somewhere warm and dry.

Be warned! Bees will now start robbing if honey is left exposed. We once had a member who brought home his supers and then forgot to shut the window; by the next day the house was besieged by thousands of bees and his wife went to stay with her mother! Most of the crop was lost.

Extracting honey in the kitchen can lead to divorce! Honey is sticky – but cleans up easily; propolis is sticky, stains – and does not clean up easily. The best way to avoid problems is to cover the floor before you start – not with newspaper as some suggest (this just sticks to your shoes), or with polythene (too slippery); the best thing I have found is clean cardboard – the large sheets that they put on pallets are ideal – as this will absorb drips, but will stay put on the floor.

 

6.      Committee Meeting

The next committee meeting will be on Tuesday 2nd September at The Lantern in Harlescott, commencing at 7.30 p.m. Among the issues to be discussed will be the arrangements for the AGM (see p.3) and also the programme for the coming year. The priority will be to decide the topic for the first indoor meeting of the season. This is on Wednesday September 10th at the Shirehall (7.30 p.m.) Further details of this will be posted on the website as soon as they have been finalised. N.B. Details now published. Please see the Programme page.

 

7.      Memory: New light on brain lateralisation.
        (from Apis UK Newsletter: July 2008)

It is generally known that the right and left hemispheres of the brain perform different tasks. Lesions to the left hemisphere typically bring impairments in language production and comprehension, while lesions to the right hemisphere give rise to deficits in the visual-spatial perception, such as the inability to recognize familiar faces.

In the last few years, we have become used to the idea that functional asymmetry between the left and right sides of the nervous system is not unique to humans: fishes, amphibians, birds and mammals have functional and anatomical asymmetries. So, the idea that all vertebrate species, even non-human ones without any linguistic skills, have an asymmetric brain seems to be finally accepted.

Now, this process of extension among species is going on and brain lateralization has been extended beyond the class Vertebrata. Insects, with their nervous system so different from that of vertebrates, are also “lateralized”, and this has been demonstrated in a paper written by an international team of scientists and published by Lesley J. Rogers of the Centre for Neuroscience and Animal Behaviour, University of New England (Australia), and Giorgio Vallortigara, of the Centre for Mind/Brain Sciences, University of Trento (Italy).

The scientists looked at memory in bees using a widely tested procedure, known as proboscis extension reflex (PER). When presented with a droplet of sugar solution, the honeybee extends its proboscis to get it. If an odour stimulus, such as lemon scent, is present shortly before the droplet, after very short training, animals learn to extend their proboscis when the odour alone is presented.

The honeybee can learn to discriminate between different odours, extending its proboscis to lemon and not to vanilla, keeping memory of the correct scent for a long period. The odour is perceived by the two antennae that honeybees have on their heads. After the bees had been trained using both antennae, Rogers and Vallortigara tested their recall ability, by coating either the left or right antenna with a harmless latex-based substance and thus rendering one antenna incapable of detecting odour.

The authors observed that, one hour after training, honeybees recognized the correct odour when the right antenna was in use and didn’t when using the left antenna. However, 24 hours after training, the pattern reversed: correct responses were significantly higher when the left antenna was in use. The “lateralization” appears to be linked to memory consolidation. Testing animals using lateral presentation (the odour was presented to the left or right side of the bee) and no coating of the antennae (both antennae in use), the authors found that bees showed better recall of the task when they were tested at one hour after training using the right antenna, an effect that disappeared three hours after training.

However, by 6 hours after training, a lateral shift had occurred and the memory could be recalled mainly when the left antenna was in use. The left antenna took over on the long period (after 6 hours and remained so at 24 hours).

It would seem that the right antenna and the associated neural structures form the basis for a short term and relatively temporary memory, and left antenna supports long term learning, taking place from about 3 hours after training on. It is not clear at present whether learning via the right antenna is sufficient to trigger shorter-term encoding on the right side of the brain and longer-term encoding on the left side of the brain. An alternative hypothesis would be that the memory encoding is the same on both sides of the brain but only the right antenna has access for shorter-term recall and only the left antenna has access for longer-term recall.

What could the ecological reason for that be? Perhaps the shift from one antenna to the other allows use of the right antenna to learn about new odours without interference from odour memories in long-term stores. It is known that bees visit different flowers at different times of the day, as nectar becomes available, and this would require the formation of different odour associations during the course of the day, a process that might be aided if recall of earlier odour memories is avoided on the learning side of the brain.


 

8.      And finally.........  

He popped the question in the rain,
Twas muddy where they'd trodden,
The arm around her waist was wet,
She said "This is so sodden”

England's Glory Matchbox No 2643 (circa 1953). Seen in Hertfordshire Newsletter: July 2008 (Courtesy BEES)

 

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