Advertisement

Bee alert after parasite discovery

An emergency biosecurity zone has been imposed to stop the movement of bees across NSW and hives are being destroyed after the discovery of a parasite with the potential to wreak havoc on Australia’s bee and honey industries.

Jun 27, 2022, updated Jun 27, 2022
Photo supplied

Photo supplied

The tiny reddish-brown varoa mites have the potential to do severe damage to the Australian bee industry, worth $147 million annually, as they spread viruses that cripple bees’ ability to fly, gather food and pollinate crops.

The mite was found last week at hives near the Port of Newcastle in NSW, with a further detection on Saturday at hives belonging to a commercial beekeeper about ten kilometres away.

An initial 50km biosecurity zone was put in place at Newcastle on Friday where beekeepers must notify the state Department of Primary Industries of the location of their hives.

All hives within the 10 km zone were eradicated, while a 25km surveillance zone is also active around the site with officials monitoring and inspecting managed and feral honey bees.

Acting chief executive of the Australian honey bee industry council Danny Le Feuvre said up to 100 hives have been destroyed near Newcastle as part of containment measures.

“The bee keeping industry in Australia has got its eyes on Newcastle at the moment,” he said.

“We’re still very confident that we have it contained and it’s eradicable.”

Le Feuvre said the statewide standstill on bee movement was adopted to give authorities time for tracing activities.

“To identify where the commercial beekeepers’ hives are, where they’ve been and what other hives they’ve been in contact with,” he said.

He said the Newcastle beekeeper also had 120 hives at Trangie in central west NSW, which were inspected before being destroyed.

“We’ve inspected all the hives at Trangie, and there have been no mites identified…however the mites are the size of a pinhead amongst thousands of bees.”

InDaily in your inbox. The best local news every workday at lunch time.
By signing up, you agree to our User Agreement andPrivacy Policy & Cookie Statement. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

NSW Agriculture Minister Dugald Saunders issued the order on Sunday, saying no bees will be allowed to be moved across the state.

“Australia is the only major honey producing country free from varroa mite, the most serious pest to honey bees worldwide,” Saunders said.

“If varroa mite settles in the state, it will have severe consequences, so we’re taking every precaution and action needed to contain the parasite and protect the local honey industry and pollination.”

-AAP

Local News Matters
Advertisement
Copyright © 2024 InDaily.
All rights reserved.