New tactics in mite fight

The fight against varroa mite has shifted from eradication to management, prompting the bee industry to look overseas for new approaches. ANDREW MOLE reports.

Blink and you’d miss it – the varroa mite’s minute presence is all but invisible to the naked eye.

Yet the tiny mite is the greatest known threat to Australia’s honey bee and pollination industry.

For nearly a year and a half, the industry has been battling the tiny parasite, culminating in the largest biosecurity outbreak in the country’s history and initiating a federal $132 million varroa response plan.

This tiny menace is a parasitic mite that lives on honey bees and also feeds off the brood of a honey bee colony.

It’s a difficult pest to eradicate or even manage because it causes a variety of damage, including reducing the health of the honey bees, impacting drone fertility and honey production.

Without treatment, Varroa is responsible for entire colony losses.

Until June 2022, Australia was the last continent globally without varroa mite, but to the shock of the industry, varroa was discovered in sentinel hives at the port of Newcastle.

After 15 months of attempting to eradicate the pest, the National Management Group, as the peak decision body for the National Varroa Mite Emergency Response, announced it was no longer feasible to achieve eradication and that Australia will transition to a “management response”.

Lessons from our neighbours

Despite the seriousness of the situation, producers are hopeful their industry will continue to thrive, with experts looking overseas for inspired approaches to continuing production alongside infestations.

Bianca Giggins is the Varroa coordinator for the Australian Honeybee Industry Council.

She’s recently returned from a tour of New Zealand with industry colleagues, including Bee Biosecurity Officers, sponsored by AgriFutures Australia.

Australian BBOs work under the National Bee Biosecurity Program, a national industry-funded program administered by Plant Health Australia.

They are the first line of communication and engagement for all beekeepers across the country.

“A BBO’s role in Australia is to talk with beekeepers and help manage biosecurity in their colonies and their operation,” Bianca says.

Over the course of the eight-day tour, the Australian cohort of seven BBOs spoke to government agencies, key industry representatives and beekeepers with a variety of production scales.

Bianca says they visited hives around Wellington, Lake Taupo, Palmerston North, Taihape, Hamilton and Auckland and were delighted to learn growers not only continued production after their initial outbreak 15 years ago, but there have been many newcomers to the industry since.

“We were really surprised at the different behaviours of beekeepers, in terms of variety of production techniques and markets,” she says.

“And they are equally varied in their treatment of varroa and the methodology behind why they chose a certain treatment at a certain time.”

Shifting to management

The group also studied a variety of control methods in New Zealand, which became immediately relevant on their return to Australia when the response to Varroa shifted from eradication to management.

“The National Management Group in charge of the decision-making process have unanimously agreed that it is no longer feasible to eradicate (Varroa). So that means we no longer contain or hold infected premises and euthanase them as per the original plan,” Bianca says.

“This also means there’ll be a time period where that National Management Group and the Consultative Committee on Emergency Plant Pests will work together to come up with (a plan for) what transition to management actually looks like and a list of best practice management strategies.”

Currently, BBOs are bracing for varroa to pop up in other regions of Australia. The New Zealand tour has been a tremendous learning opportunity for them and provided not only case study examples of managing outbreaks, but upskilling to provide best practice advice in the field.

It is anticipated the transition to management plan will emphasise the need for beekeepers to be well informed about how to assess and monitor the levels of varroa in colonies and to act accordingly for treatment with legally available methods.

Bianca says the conditions of treatment may be very different depending on the location of the beekeeper’s operation.

“Eradication would’ve been amazing and it was an ambitious task,” she concedes.

“Varroa is our common enemy. We need to work together and understand that everybody’s affected by each and every beekeeper that is near them. You are only going to be as good as your neighbour.”

Bianca emphasised the tremendous opportunity presented for the different businesses, hobbyists and government agencies to unite, to formulate achievable varroa mite management practices and allow production to grow.

“I think it’s a good time to be able to have courage to continue and be encouraged to lead in the new space that we’ve all found ourselves in.”

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