Tropilaelaps mite
Tropilaelaps spp.
Occurrence
On all continents where the western honey bee occurs. For Europe, the occurrence of T. mercedesae was detected in the eastern Black Sea region from 2021. Tropilaelaps mites are not yet present in Austria or the EU.
Route of infection
Tropilaelaps mites multiply in the capped bee brood and leave the cell when the bee hatches. They then linger briefly on combs and adult bees and again actively invade a brood cell that is about to be capped. Transmission from colony to colony occurs either naturally by bees flying away with Tropilaelaps mites on them or through beekeeping work, when infested brood combs or bees are transferred to other colonies.
Symptomatology
Adult Tropilaelaps mites are approx. 1 x 0.5 mm in size, reddish-brown in colour and move rapidly around the hive. In an infested brood cell, the adult mite and its offspring suck on the bee pupa, damaging it. Clinical symptoms are bees with malformed or missing wings and legs, flightless crawlers, incomplete brood nest and dead brood. The damage caused by Tropilaelaps mites is similar to that of the Varroa mite.
Last updated: 07.10.2024
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