Despite dramatic losses in wild honeybees
and in colonies maintained by hobbyist beekeepers, Cornell University apiculturists
say the pollination needs of commercial agriculture in the United States
are being met for now by commercial beekeepers, although their supplies
are precarious. With the disease losses among wild and hobbyist honeybees,
the commercial honeybees are more important than ever, Morse observed.
Crop pollination is a migratory enterprise,
with honeybees following seasonal crops week by week as trees and other
plants bloom. Many commercial beekeepers' bees winter in Florida and travel
on trucks that hold up to 500 colonies and 10 million to 15 million pollinators.
Commercial beekeepers place their colonies near crops that need pollinating
and charge growers for the service. Migratory beekeepers also sell the honey
and other bee products that result, but fees for pollination services are
their main source of income.
"We need to sustain a significant
research effort to protect the safe and affordable supply of fruits and
vegetables to which people have become accustomed," Calderone said.
"Mites are living organisms, and mite populations will eventually adapt
to whatever control measures we develop."
So research efforts at Cornell and
other institutions are focusing on the biology of the Varroa mite, trying
to understand how it locates bees in the first place. "If we can determine
the host-location mechanism and discover the physical and chemical cues
the mites use, we may be able to manipulate those cues for a control mechanism
that will protect the bees," Calderone said. A number of natural products,
including essential oils from herbs and spices, also are being examined
for their potential in mite control, he added.
But a genetic solution breeding bees
that are resistant to mites will be much more difficult, Calderone predicted.
Even if beekeepers start with disease-resistant stock, it is almost impossible
to control mating (with nonresistant males) when new queens leave the colonies,
he explained. "Commercially viable, disease-resistant stock is the
best answer, but that is years away, at best," Calderone said. 'Nonetheless,
it remains the long-term focus of several research programs around the country."
Meanwhile, commercial beekeepers
are surviving by applying good management techniques in their craft, Morse
said. Dead colonies are replaced when beekeepers "split" their
surviving colonies each year to maintain the stock needed for pollination.
"Growers who rent bees are well
aware of the problems and are making plans with beekeepers for the colonies
they will need for next spring's pollination," Morse said. 
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