Temperaturens inverkan på vinterförluster hso svenska honungsbin
Abstract
Insects, such as the honey bee, play a fundamental part in pollination of both wild plants and in
agriculture and thereby a large part in the food supply for mankind. Declining numbers have
been observed for both honey bees and other pollinators in different parts of the world and it is
of utmost importance to understand what affects these declines. In this study, winter loss data
from Swedish bee colonies has been used to investigate the relationship between loss and
temperature. The data covers an average winter loss for all of Sweden from 1920–2018 and on
a more detailed level from 1997–2018. Correlation analyses between annual winter loss and
monthly mean temperatures have been executed and a function has been created to model
winter loss based on temperature. In Götaland and Svealand, colder temperatures in October,
January and February have a significant connection to higher winter loss and in Norrland the
same connection applies only for February. The model overestimates the winter loss before
1997 which probably is due to the invasive mite, Varroa destructor, that came to Sweden during
the 90s. Based on infected colonies the model becomes more sensitive to temperatures than it
had been based on non-infested bee colonies. As climate changes so has the relationship
between winter loss and the monthly mean temperature.
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Date
2019-10-30Author
Carvalho Nejstgaard, Gabriela
Keywords
winter loss
honeybee
Apis mellifera
temperature
climate
model
Series/Report no.
B
1056
Language
swe