Write a Review
Add to My Favorite
Refer it to Friend
Report Broken Link
Other links at Livestock > Beekeeping > Pests and Diseases
Internet resource page on bee diseases maintained by BIOME at Nottingham University, UK.
Random site Quote:
Agriculture, Food and Forestry gateway
Health and Life Sciences Agriculture, Food and Forestry
Agriculture, Food and Forestry
This service was formerly known as AgriFor.
Welcome to the agriculture, food and forestry pages of Intute. We
Discusses the importance of the mysterious bee deaths, theories on its causes, and history of the problem.
Random site Quote:
Questions and Answers: Colony Collapse Disorder
Beginning in October 2006, some beekeepers began reporting losses of 30-90
percent of their hives. While colony losses are not unexpected during
See website for more details...
Method used to kill 95% of the varroa mite in a hive.
Random site Quote:
VARROA MITES and how to catch them
Here is the method used to kill 95% of the varroa mite
This method is developed by
, Joop Beetsma*(died in Marz '99),
* University Wageningen, The Netherlands,
See website for more details...
Information on which oils work, how to mix them, and how to use them.
Random site Quote:
Control in Honeybees With Essential
Essential oils have been shown to provide effective mite
control in honeybee colonies. This site will provide the latest
essential oil research results,
See website for more details...
A product that allows for the twenty-one or forty-day commercial treatment of the Varroa and Tracheal mites using Formic acid. FAQ, video, sales and supplier details, and directions for use.
Random site Quote:
Helping protect bees against Varroa and Tracheal mites since 1995. MiteGone evaporator pads were designed by the beekeeper - for the beekeeper. MiteGone evaporator pads have been tested successfully and used since 1995 in commercial use by local beekeepers in the Okanagan Valley of British Columbia, Canada. The MiteGone dispenser is a liquid evaporator that allows for the prolonged commercial treatment of the Varroa and Tracheal mites using Formic acid.
All documents on this site are in PDF format. You must have Adobe Acrobat reader to view them.
Click the icon above to download
Adobe Acrobat Reader®
Protecting bees against Varroa and Tracheal