Beekeepers commission president predicts up to 30 per cent colony loss this year
A killer mite could affect honey production in Saskatchewan this year, according to the president of the Saskatchewan Beekeepers Development Commission.
Saskatchewan typically produces about 20 million pounds of honey in a year, but the aptly named Varroa destructor mites could kill up to 30 per cent of all colonies, Nathan Wendell said Tuesday.
“(It’s) a parasitic mite that feeds on the fat bodies of bees and young bees,” Wendell said. “It’s something that we’ve been dealing with here in Canada for quite a number of years.
“The Varroa mite weakens the hive and brings in viruses that can cause stress to the hive, weaken it or cause death of that particular colony.”