Varroa Disease in Honey Bees

Authors

  • Atyaf Abbas Kazem Aboud AlHamdani Department of Biology, College of Science for Girls, University of Babylon
  • Esraa Kamel Hussein Ali Department of Biology, College of Science, University of Karbala
  • Nawras Nazim Dhari Mayouf Department of Biology, College of Science, University of Wasit
  • Issa Khairy Ali Mohammed Department of Biology, College of Science, University of Zakho

Keywords:

Varroa, honey bees, Wadi Doan conditions

Abstract

Varroa is one of the most prominent pests that infect honey bees in the world. Its infestation causes direct and indirect losses that ultimately lead to the loss of honey bee colonies, unless it is treated. Its infestation losses exceed the losses of all honey bee pests combined. This research aims to study the cleaning behavior of honey bees raised under Wadi Doan conditions. To benefit from it in integrated management, Varroa is a type of animal belonging to the Varroa genus of the Varroa species. The size of this species is small and can be seen with the naked eye. It is dark brown in color and has a flat oval shape. The Varroa destructor mite lives as an external parasite between the abdominal rings of males or bee larvae and feeds on the bee (hemolymph) by creating a wound in the bee’s body with its mouth parts and then applying pressure on the edge of the chink. And it absorbs blood. The Varroa mite walks zigzagging like a crab, with short stops. It does not like light and hides in the cells if it is exposed to it.

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Published

2024-05-24

How to Cite

Atyaf Abbas Kazem Aboud AlHamdani, Esraa Kamel Hussein Ali, Nawras Nazim Dhari Mayouf, & Issa Khairy Ali Mohammed. (2024). Varroa Disease in Honey Bees. Eurasian Journal of Research, Development and Innovation, 32, 123–141. Retrieved from https://geniusjournals.org/index.php/ejrdi/article/view/6008

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