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The Africanized bees may be developing resistance to the mites more rapidly than honeybees, meaning Africanized bee colonies are slowly replacing the dying honeybees. "In 1993 or 1994, right before the Africanized bees came into the area the population went from 200 colonies in the area we were studying (near Oracle Junction) to less than 10," Fewell said. "Those were all (wild honeybee) hives and then the next year we saw the African bees move into it and it's now more than 50 percent African." There are now 50 hives in the area and they are mostly Africanized, Fewell said. As nature continues to wage its parasitic war, beekeepers say they are feeling the loss. Mesa beekeeper Ken Orletsky figures parasitic mites have cost him close to $1 million over the last 10 years. Lenard Hines, a Sierra Vista beekeeper, said he lost several thousand dollars in 1989 and 1990 when trachea mites decimated over 200 of his 660 hives. "I think it would be fair to say that this mite represents the most severe losses to the beekeeping industry that it's ever faced," said Eric Erickson, director of the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Carl Hayden Bee Research Center in Tucson.
"The impact on the colony is the production of a population of worker bees that are shorter-lived, weaker and sometimes deformed," Erickson said. "All that just leads to the decline of the colony until eventually it dies out." Beekeepers are fighting the infestation with a chemical called Apistan and by breeding hives that show the greatest resistance. "It's going to be a long, slow process," Erickson said.
Here are some other places to read and learn about Africanized "Killer" bees and their battle with parasitic mites. On the Web: There are hundreds of sites on the web, but their web addresses often change. It is best to look for them using a search engines like HOTBOT or Google using the key words: Africanized bees, trachea mites and varroa mites.
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