Gebruiker:Quichot/kladblok/Buckfastbij

The Buckfast bee is a strain of honey bee. It is a man-made bee race, a cross of many strains of bees, developed by Karl Kehrle, also known as Brother Adam, who was in charge of beekeeping from 1919 at Buckfast Abbey in Devon in the United Kingdom, where the bees are still bred today. Most of the breeding work in Europe is done by breeders belonging to the breeders' association Gemeinschaft der Europäischen Buckfastimker. This organisation maintains a pedigree for Buckfast bees, originating from the time of Kehrle.

Quichot/kladblok/Buckfastbij
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Quichot/kladblok/Buckfastbij
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Origin bewerken

In the early 20th century, bee populations were being decimated by tracheal mites. This condition, later called "acarine" disease, after the acarine parasitic mite that invaded the bees' tracheal tubes and shortened their lives, was killing off thousands of colonies in the British Isles.[1]

In 1916, only 16 surviving colonies were left in the abbey. All of them were either pure Ligurian (Italian) or of Ligurian origin, hybrids between Ligurian and the English black bee A. m. mellifera. Kehrle also imported some more Italian queens. From these he began to develop what would come to be known as the Buckfast bee.

Heritage bewerken

The Buckfast contains heritage from mainly A. m. ligustica (North Italian), A. m. mellifera (English), A. m. mellifera (French), A. m. anatoliaca (Armenian) and A. m. cecropia (Greek). The Buckfast bee of today also contains heritage from two rare and docile African stocks A. m. sahariensis and the A. m. monticola. The Buckfast bee was not interbred with the Apis mellifera scutellata from which the so-called Africanized bee was derived in Brazil in the 1950s (also known as the "killer bee")."[2]

History bewerken

Its developer Kehrle was inspired by the survival of the Italian × black bee crosses. To be able to control the matings, he started to use an isolated valley in Dartmoor. With no other bees within range, Kehrle could maintain their genetic integrity and develop desirable traits.[3] Kehrle investigated various honey bee races and made many long journeys in Europe, Africa, and the Middle East, searching for pure races and interesting local stocks. The book In Search of the Best Strains of Bee tells about his travels in search of genetic building blocks. Kehrle imported more bees to cross with his developing Buckfast bee.

Every new bee strain or bee race was first crossed with the existing Buckfast bee. In most cases, the new desired qualities were passed on to the new generation and the new combination was then made stable with further breeding work. Every crossing with a new race took about 10 years before the desired genes were fixed in the strain. Over 70 years, Kehrle succeeded in developing a vigorous, healthy, and fecund honey bee which he dubbed the Buckfast bee.

The Buckfast bee is popular among beekeepers and is available from bee breeders in Germany, Ireland, the United Kingdom, France and other places. Most of the Buckfast bee's qualities are very favourable. They are extremely gentle and highly productive. Kehrle, in his book, Beekeeping at Buckfast Abbey, writes that in 1920 they obtained "an average of no less than 192 lbs [87 kg] surplus per colony and individual yields exceeding 3 cwt [= 336 lbs or 152 kg]."[4] In the 1986 BBC-affiliated documentary, The Monk and the Honey Bee, more than 400 pounds (181 kg) of honey are reported to have been produced by a single Buckfast colony. According to Kehrle, "The average annual honey yield over the last thirty years has been 30 kg [66 lb] per colony. Thus we have a favourable balance compared with the average production in America or in Europe."[5]

The stock has been imported into the United States (eggs, semen, and adult queens via Canada) and they are easily available.[6]

Buckfast breeding program bewerken

The qualities and characteristics desired in Kehrle's breeding can be divided into three groups: primary, secondary, and tertiary, those that have bearing on management.

Primary bewerken

Primary qualities are those qualities essential for any maximum honey production.

  • Fecundity — maintaining at least 9 frames of brood May–July
  • Foraging zeal — a boundless capacity for foraging work, close inbreeding to intensify this quality can be counterproductive.
  • Resistance to disease
  • Disinclination to swarm

Secondary bewerken

  • Longevity
  • Wing-power
  • Keen sense of smell
  • Defensive characteristics
  • Hardiness and ability to overwinter
  • Spring development
  • Thrift
  • Instinct of self provisioning
  • Arrangement of honey stores
  • Wax production and comb building
  • Gathering of pollen
  • Tongue-reach

Tertiary bewerken

  • Good temper
  • Calm behavior
  • Disinclination to propolize
  • No brace combs
  • Cleanliness
  • Honey capping
  • Sense of orientation[7]

Characteristics bewerken

Strengths bewerken

  • Good honey producer
  • Prolific queens (lay many eggs)
  • Overwinters well
  • Frugal — low amount of brood during fall (uses less honey stores during winter)
  • Packs brood nest with honey for good wintering
  • Curtails egg-laying during dearths
  • Brood-rearing ceases during late fall
  • Extremely gentle, with low sting instinct
  • Low swarm instinct
  • High tracheal mite tolerance
  • Low incidence of chalkbrood and wax moths due to good housecleaning techniques
  • Very hygienic
  • Build up rapidly once started
  • Produce little propolis/brace comb[8]
  • Does well in cold/wet spring

Weaknesses bewerken

  • Low amount of brood during winter
  • Possibility of second-generation defensiveness if not requeened (may be from Africanized genes introduced)

Referenties bewerken

  1. douglasfarm.net. douglasfarm.net.
  2. douglasfarm.net. douglasfarm.net.
  3. The Origin of the Buckfast Honey Bee - Brother Adam. pedigreeapis.org.
  4. Brother Adam, Beekeeping at Buckfast Abbey, (Northern Bee Books, 1987), 12.
  5. Brother Adam, "Beekeeping at Buckfast", 1950.
  6. http://pubs.cas.psu.edu/freepubs/pdfs/agrs93.pdf pg. 20
  7. Brother Adam - Qualities of Buckfast Bees. fundp.ac.be.
  8. Archived copy. Gearchiveerd op 23 juli 2011. Geraadpleegd op 27 maart 2011.

External links bewerken

Further reading bewerken