Has everyone out there been sleeping? Our saviour is down south and it’s the Cornish black bee. I still think they look a bit to yellow for my liking. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-23298530
Has everyone out there been sleeping? Our saviour is down south and it’s the Cornish black bee. I still think they look a bit to yellow for my liking. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-23298530
LOL at that and the dark ones look far more like Carnica than AMM with the wide gray bands.
They had a feature on the Varroa resistant Amm in Cornwall at 6:55 on Radio 5 this morning. Utter garbage. Their reporter was from somewhere near me in the Midlands (Steve?) who came up with some gems about this being the long lost Amm, found nowhere else, that Varroa was everywhere in the UK etc. etc. I didn't know whether to laugh or cry.
Where is the evidence that these bees are really Amm or Varroa resistant (surely too much to ask for two miracles in one day)?
You do not need morphomety or DNA microsatellite data to categorically state that those bees are definitely not AMM,
They look more like a cross between Buckfast and Carnica.
I'm with you on the identity ... but never trust the pics used by the BBC. It wouldn't have surprised me to see a picture of a red mason bee illustrating the story ...
I think the satire, if there was any, was unintended DB. I had read it as a sincere if misguided opinion. But never mind....maybe I missed the point. Wouldn't be the first time. I maybe need to get more practiced at the banter eh?!
DR, he is also known as Jonathan Swift, I refrained from using that version of his name to avoid the perfectly understandable confusion with our own Jon - also a man of letters.
Jonathan Swift was the Dean of Trinity College Dublin, one of the worlds great universities. He was the author of such satirical works as; "Gullivers Travels" and "The Tale of a Tub". He is regarded as a master of satire.
Last edited by Dark Bee; 14-07-2013 at 01:02 PM.
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