Imperial Valley Press

New tool improves beekeepers’ overwinter­ing odds

- BY KIM KAPLAN

TUCSON, Ariz. — A new tool from the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e’s Agricultur­al Research Service can predict the odds that honey bee colonies overwinter­ed in cold storage will be large enough to rent for almond pollinatio­n in February.

Identifyin­g which colonies will not be worth spending dollars to overwinter can improve beekeepers’ bottom line.

Beekeepers have been losing an average of 30 percent of overwinter­ed colonies for nearly 15 years. It is expensive to overwinter colonies in areas where winter temperatur­es stay above freezing. So a less expensive practice of overwinter­ing bee colonies in cold storage is becoming popular, often in North Dakota.

This new tool calculates the probabilit­y of a managed honey bee colony surviving the winter based on two measuremen­ts: the size of colony and the percent varroa mite infestatio­n in September, according to ARS entomologi­st Gloria DeGrandi-Hoffman, who headed the team. DeGrandi-Hoffman is research leader of the ARS Carl Hayden Bee Research Center in Tucson, Ariz.

By consulting the probabilit­y table for the likelihood of a colony having a minimum of six frames of bees — the number required for a colony to be able to fulfill a pollinatio­n contract for almond growers come February — beekeepers can decide in September if it is economical­ly worthwhile to overwinter the colony in cold storage.

“The size of a colony in late summer or early fall can be deceiving with respect to its chances of making it through the winter. Even large colonies with more than 12 frames of bees (about 30,000 bees) have less than a 0.5 probabilit­y (50 percent chance) of being suitable for almond pollinatio­n if they have 5 or more mites per 100 bees in September,” DeGrandi-Hoffman said.

Even with this cost-cutting help, the research team found that revenue from pollinatio­n contracts by itself is not likely to provide a sustainabl­e income to a beekeeper anymore. They followed 190 honey bee colonies and recorded all costs.

Considerab­le resources were expended to feed colonies and on varroa mite and pathogen control. Costs were about $200 per colony.

Almond pollinatio­n contracts paid an average of $190 per colony in 2019.

One way for beekeepers to remain economical­ly viable as a business, is to produce a honey crop from their bees. This is most often facilitate­d by moving colonies to the Northern Great Plains where bees can forage for nectar and pollen from a wide variety flowering plants.

“The situation has changed a lot. It is more expensive to manage honey bees with costs to feed colonies when flowers are not available and to control varroa mites. And it is more difficult to find places for honey bee colonies that provide the diverse nutrition they need,” said DeGrandi-Hoffman. “Pollinatio­n revenue alone is just not adequate for beekeepers to stay in business. But we need beekeepers because managed bees are a lynchpin in agricultur­al production today.

“Successful­ly using cold storage will help beekeepers’ bottom line, but we are really just learning what the best management practices should be with cold storage,” she added.

 ?? PHOTO PEGGY GREB ?? A honey bee buzzes around a sunflower. You can see the build-up of pollen on her rear leg, in what is called a pollen basket. This is how she stores pollen. When she brings the pollen back to the hive, the house bees press the pollen and make bee bread, which is the protein used to feed the nurse bee and immature bees.
PHOTO PEGGY GREB A honey bee buzzes around a sunflower. You can see the build-up of pollen on her rear leg, in what is called a pollen basket. This is how she stores pollen. When she brings the pollen back to the hive, the house bees press the pollen and make bee bread, which is the protein used to feed the nurse bee and immature bees.

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