Fáìlì:Varroa destructor on honeybee host.jpg

Fáìlì àtìbẹ̀rẹ̀(2,400 × 1,710 pixel, ìtóbi faili: 1.26 MB, irú MIME: image/jpeg)

Àkótán

Ìjúwe
English: "Honey bees are important as honey producers and as pollinators of agricultural crops. They are estimated to provide "value added" pollination worth approximately $14 billion per year in the USA. Varroa mites threaten agricultural pollination directly by weakening and destroying bee colonies. They also mandate more regular management of hives that is both labor intensive and expensive.

"The first varroa species, Varroa jacobsoni, was described from Indonesia in 1904 parasitizing the local bees (Apis cerana). New research studies by Drs. D. L. Anderson and J. W. H. Trueman, (CSIRO, Australia) indicated that V. jacobsoni is a species complex containing 18 different genetic variants that belong to 2, possibly 5 different species of varroa mites. Anderson and Trueman indicated that they were unable to find morphological differences to distinguish the genetic types. The varroa associated with the European honey bee (Apis mellifera) was described as a new species, Varroa destructor by Anderson & Trueman, 2000.

The Systematic Entomology Laboratory, Bee Research Laboratory and the Electron Microscopy Unit in the Soybean Genomics and Improvement Laboratory are examining the morphology of varroa mites. They expect that some morphological differences will be found to distinguish the newly discovered species of Varroa. If this is the case, this research will facilitate the scientific community's ability to study the ecology, biology, and control of these important pest mites.
Ọjọ́ọdún 22 Oṣù Kẹ̀wá 2003 (according to Exif data)
Orísun Source not available online. Reference: http://www.sel.barc.usda.gov/acari/frames/beemites.html
Olùdá Courtesy, Eric Erbe, Christopher Pooley: USDA, ARS, EMU.
Ìyọ̀nda
(Ìtúnlò fáìlì yìí)
"All of the micrographs on the web site are in the public domain and can be freely used." --Christopher Pooley.

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Tí ẹ bá ní àwòrán tó dára bákanáà tó ṣe é tẹ̀jáde lábẹ́ ìwé àṣẹ ẹ̀tọ́àwòkọ tóyẹ, ẹ rúsókè, ẹ fún ní àlẹ̀mọ́, kí ẹ sì yànlórúkọ.

Ìwé àṣẹ

Public domain This image is in the public domain because it contains materials that originally came from the Agricultural Research Service, the research agency of the United States Department of Agriculture.

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lọ́wọ́13:57, 25 Oṣù Keje 2007Àwòrán kékeré fún ní 13:57, 25 Oṣù Keje 20072,400 × 1,710 (1.26 MB)Brian0918rotated 180
15:09, 23 Oṣù Keje 2007Àwòrán kékeré fún ní 15:09, 23 Oṣù Keje 20072,400 × 1,710 (1.27 MB)Brian0918"Honey bees are important as honey producers and as pollinators of agricultural crops. They are estimated to provide "value added" pollination worth approximately $14 billion per year in the USA. Varroa mites threaten agricultural pollination directly by

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