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Use of Apiguard
Frequently Asked Questions
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1. Q: What is Apiguard?
A: Apiguard is thymol
in a slow-release gel used to control varroa mites in honey bee
colonies.
2. Q: How do I apply Apiguard?
A: See Vita's leaflet.
If you are using Apiguard in trays: peel back the lid of the
tray and place, gel side up on top of the brood frames. Make
sure to leave enough space for the bees to get into the tray
— use a spacer or an empty super on top of the brood
chamber. Close the hive. After 2 weeks repeat with a second
tray and leave in place for 2 - 4 weeks.
If you are using the 3 kg tub: use the scoop and spatula
to apply 50g Apiguard onto the dosing tray provided. Repeat
after 2 weeks and leave in place for a further 2-4 weeks.
3. Q: At what time of the year should I use
Apiguard?
A: Apiguard is best
applied in summer or autumn, outside the period of honeyflow.
The external temperature should be above 59°F, which means
that the colony is active. Distribution of the Apiguard gel
depends on the bees transporting it around the hive during the
process of hive cleaning, and this activity increases as the
external temperature rises. Application during honeyflows
should be avoided in case of tainting the honey.
4. Q: Why can't Apiguard be used in
springtime?
A: Apiguard can be used
in springtime, if necessary, provided the daily temperature is
high enough. However, it is not the best time to apply the
product. Thymol, which is the active ingredient in Apiguard,
can sometimes make the queen stop egg laying for a short period
and that is not what is needed in early spring - the colony
needs to be growing. If the mite infestation is high in spring,
then it is safer to use Apiguard rather than let the mites
reproduce further, but treatment is otherwise best left until
the summer.
5. Q: Can I feed my colonies while using
Apiguard?
A: Yes and No. The
recommendation is not to apply Apiguard while feeding
simultaneously in case the bees spend all their time taking the
feed and not bothering to clean out the Apiguard gel. This is
not a high risk and will vary between different colonies, so if
you have to feed and treat at the same time, try it in a few
colonies first and see how the bees react.
6. Q: The first dose is supposed to be left
on for 2 weeks, but I've noticed that the gel disappears after
only a few days; do I need to put on another dose right away?
A: No, the speed at
which the gel disappears depends on the temperature and on the
behavior of the individual colony. It can take from 2 to 10
days to be removed from the tray/dosing tray. The gel will
reduce as vapor is given off and as the bees detect the
"foreign material" they try to remove it. At high
temperatures the vapors are stronger. The bees will find the
gel and try to clean it up quickly. Strong colonies generally
work faster than smaller or weaker ones. At lower temperatures,
the gel sublimes more slowly. It is not detected as readily by
the workers and they do not remove it as quickly.
Even if the gel seems to have disappeared after only a
few days, there is no need to apply a second treatment until 2
weeks have passed. The thymol, although not in the tray, is
active throughout the colony during this time, having been
carried around by the housecleaning bees.
7. Q: It takes longer for the gel in the
second dose to disappear; why is this?
A: The second dose
usually lasts longer in the trays because the bees have become
more accustomed to the odor of thymol in the hive by this time.
The cleaning behavior is not as pronounced as for the initial
introduction.
8. Q: After 2 weeks there is still some
Apiguard left in the tray/on the dosing card. What is happening
and what should I do?
A: Sometimes as the gel
dries, the bees lose interest in it. Empty and spread the
remainder onto a flat surface (wax foundation, cardboard about
10 cm x 10 cm). If there is only a small amount of gel
remaining, smear it on the top of the brood frames. This is
active Apiguard and will be removed by the bees, which will
further help in the control of mites.
9. Q: The first dose has been on for 2
weeks, now the second dose should be put on for 2 to 4 weeks.
What if I have a honeyflow in this time?
A: If you expect a
honeyflow, do not treat. If it is essential to treat before
moving bees to a honey flow, apply one dose of Apiguard and
remove any residual material before the moving the bees. The
second dose should be applied immediately after the honeyflow.
This regime may possibly not be as effective as two successive
applications of Apiguard.
10. Q: I used Apiguard in the spring and my
colony seems very small, why?
A: It could be that the
queen stopped egg laying for a short while. This doesn’t
often happen, but if it does, it is a temporary effect only.
She will resume egg laying when the thymol odor is dissipating,
after around 3 weeks, with no damage to the colony or to the
queen.
11. Q: What mite control level will I get
by treating with Apiguard?
A: Apiguard often gives
results as good as those obtained previously with Apistan or
Bayvarol, but a lower efficacy should be generally expected,
somewhere between 85 - 95% varroa control. The average we have
recorded through thousands of hive treatments is 93%. Apiguard
works better the warmer it is, up to 100°F.
12. Q: Why should I use Apiguard if it
doesn't work as well as Apistan or Bayvarol?
A: Strains of
Varroa mite resistant to pyrethroids (active ingredients of
Apistan and Bayvarol) exist in many areas. Apistan and Bayvarol
may not be effective in those areas, so another type of
treatment needs to be used. Apiguard works in a different way
than pyrethroids and will kill pyrethroid-resistant mites.
Where resistant mites are not already established, it is a good
idea to “rotate” treatments between pyrethroids and
Apiguard.
13. Q: Can I use Apiguard and Apistan at
the same time?
A: Yes, you
could, but it would be a waste of money and would have no real
advantage. Use one or the other, but not both at the same time.
14. Q: Are varroa mites resistant to
thymol?
A: At the
moment, no. Pyrethroids and other “traditional”
pesticides kill their targets by acting on specific nervous
channels in the mite or insect and it is relatively simple for
the mite or insect to change its physiology slightly so that it
is no longer affected by the nerve agent. Thymol acts in a very
different way. As a protein denaturant, it disrupts cell
membranes and affects all cellular processes. It is a very
general mode of action rather than being highly specific. It
should be more difficult for the varroa mite to change all of
its body functions to become resistant to thymol. Vita is
monitoring mite populations in Europe and we have found no
thymol resistance yet. Although it is not impossible, it is
less likely that thymol-resistant varroa will arise in the near
future.
15. Q: Can I use Apiguard with open mesh
floors?
A: Thymol vapors
are heavier than air and with an open floor much of the value
of the treatment would be lost. Close up open mesh floors
during the Apiguard treatment and open them again afterwards.
16. Q: Why is Apiguard a gel? Can't I just
use thymol?
A: Thymol is an
effective pesticide, but when applied as raw crystals or in dry
formulations, it can be difficult and hazardous to use and the
mite control levels variable. In cold conditions, the thymol
crystals do not sublime quickly enough and mites are not
controlled, but in hot conditions thymol crystals will sublime
too quickly, shocking the bees into absconding and often
killing bee brood. This is why Apiguard was developed in a gel,
to give a slow-release system for the thymol, allowing bees to
acclimatize to a low thymol concentration before gradually
building up to a mite-lethal level. When used as directed, the
Apiguard gel is safe for honey bees and brood.
17. Q: Where can I find out more
information?
A: For more
information about Apiguard, please see our website, at www.vita-europe.com.
You can
also get in touch with Dadant & Sons, Inc. |
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Vita (Europe) Ltd.
21/23 Wote Street, Basingstoke, Hants, RG21
7NE, UK
+44 (0) 1256 473 175
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Dadant & Sons, Inc.
51 S. 2nd Street, Hamilton, IL 62341
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