DAVIS -- It’s
about bee-ing all they can be.
To build a better bee, University of California, Davis
bee breeder-geneticist Susan Cobey has crossed her honey bee stock, “New World
Carnolians,” with “Old World” Carnolians from Germany.
“I'm really pleased with the stock,” said Cobey, project leader of a honey bee
stock improvement grant, funded by the California State Beekeepers’ Association
and the California Almond Board. “The bees are very gentle, very hygienic and
very productive, and hopefully will confer increased resistance to pests and
disease.”
California Secretary of Agriculture A. G. Kawamura admired the stock during the
recent State Apiary Board meeting at the Harry H. Laidlaw Jr. Honey Bee
Research Facility on the UC Davis campus.
Holding a frame of bees, Kawamara correctly singled out the queen and praised
the bees’ elegance and gentle temperament. In his youth, he reared honey bees
for several years, tending the hives and selling the honey.
The gentleness of her bees did not escape the State Apiary Board, led by newly
elected chair Jackie Park-Burris of Palo Cedro, who also serves as president of
the California State Beekeepers’ Association. They toured Cobey’s colonies
without protective bee suits, as did Kawamura.
“Sue’s bees are polite,” said beekeeper Steve Godlin of Visalia, vice chair of the California State
Apiary Board.
Cooperative Extension apiculturist Eric Mussen of UC Davis said genetic
research is sorely needed. “Although we spend a considerable amount of time
trying to find short-term fixes to our honey bee disease and pest control
problems, in the long run, the genetic solution of resistant stocks will be a
better solution.”
“Our focus,” Cobey said, “is to identify, select and enhance honey bee stocks
that show increasing levels of resistant to pests and diseases.”
Cobey initially developed the New World Carnolians stock, a dark race of honey
bees, in the early 1980s by back-crossing stocks collected from throughout the United States
to create a more pure strain. “Over time, it has proven very productive,
winter hardy, well-tempered and more resistant to pests and disease,” she said. “For many years I have wanted to work with pure Carnica. Now I can.”
The scientists imported semen from Germany in 2006 and again this
year, increasing the purity.
Cobey said genetic diversity, the raw tools for selection, is critical “in
maintaining colony fitness and resisting pests and diseases.” The honey
bee (Apis mellifera), initially brought from Europe to America in 1622 and to California in 1853, is declining in
population. Mussen and Cobey attribute the decline to multiple factors:
diseases, pesticides, parasites, malnutrition, stress, climate change and
colony collapse disorder, in which bees mysteriously abandon their hives.
Pollination issues plaque the beekeeping industry, Cobey said. “Honey bees
pollinate about one-third of the food we eat. Without bees, we wouldn’t have
the fruits, vegetables and nuts we enjoy. Bees are critical to our food supply,
especially in California,
the bread basket of the country.”
Cobey collaborates with a team of scientists from Canada,
Maryland, Minnesota
and Washington
state. They include viral researcher Michelle Flenniken, the newly
selected Häagen-Dazs post-doctoral researcher at UC Davis; reproductive
specialists John Pollard and Claire Plante of GeneSafe Technologies
Ltd., Guelph, Canada; apiculturists Steve Sheppard of Washington State
University, Pullman, and Marla Spivak of the University of Minnesota, St. Paul; and USDA scientists Jeff Pettis and Judy Chenn of Beltsville, Md.
The scientists obtained importation permits from USDA-APHIS (Animal Plant
Health Inspection Service) to import semen for a three-year period, 2008-2010,
from three honey bee subspecies, Apis mellifera ligustica from Italy, A.
m. carnica from Germany and A. m. caucasica from Turkey. To assure
that the stock carries no diseases, the scientists established a quarantine
area in an ecological preserve at WSU.
Cobey reared virgin queens from her New World Carnolian genetic line
and inseminated these with German carnica semen imported in May.
Due to importation delays (permits, inspections, quarantines and
shipping) the virgin queens received two-week-old semen, but it was still
viable, Cobey said. The queens were recently released from the WSU quarantine
and are now at UC Davis for evaluation and propagation.
“Because semen and eggs can transmit viruses, imported stock must be isolated
and quarantined. Semen does eliminate the risk of introducing parasites and
pests, but viruses remain in question. We need to do this responsibly.”
The German Carnica Association, a national program, traces its pedigrees
back to the 1950s, Cobey said. More recently the program began selecting bees
from isolated areas and exposing them to varroa mites without treatment. The
stronger bees, the ones showing more resistance, are crossed and propagated to
enhance this trait.
“Both stocks, the New World Carniolan and the German Carnica, are selected for
hygienic behavior,” Cobey said. Hygienic behavior is the ability to recognize
and remove diseased and varroa mite-infested brood from the hive, she
explained. The bees also exhibit good grooming behavior; they remove the
parasitic mites from themselves and their nestmates. Initial test results show
this trait is enhanced by crossing the two lines.
The UC Davis scientist will report on her work at the California State
Beekeepers’ Association’s 119th annual convention, set Nov. 11-13 in Harrah’s,
Lake Tahoe and at the Almond Board Convention in Modesto in early December.
The next step? She and her team will develop protocol for the safe importation
of honey bee gametes, eggs and semen. “At present, there is no standard
for honey bees, as is common for mammals,” she said. Cobey also offers
beekeeper training in stock maintenance techniques.
Cobey, who joined the UC Davis Department of Entomology in May 2007 from Ohio State
University, has conducted
research programs for three decades and is considered one of the world’s most
renowned bee insemination authorities and instructors. She teaches
courses on “The Art of Queen Rearing,” “Instrumental Insemination and Bee
Breeding” and “Advanced Instruction in Instrumental Insemination,” drawing
students from throughout the world.

