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Dear all,
I am looking for information regarding the artificial feeding,
using membranes, of the cattle tick Amblyomma
Hebraeum. I would be very grateful for any references and any
general information regarding the artificial feeding of
ticks would also be welcome.
Thank you for your help,
Steve Corrigan.
Hi everyone
I am trying to obtain DNA from a single Boophilus microplus tick
larvae. I
am boiling after macerating my larvae in 15 ul of TE buffer. I have
obtained
enough DNA for PCR but only with a half of the samples (50%).
Does somebody
have experience or literature that could recomend me about this. Sugestions
are welcomed
Thank you very much for your help
Ruben Hernandez
Texas A&M University
Hi all,
An Australian zoo has an interesting problem with a pterygosomatid mite
attacking the Fijian Crested Iguana, and I'm trying to provide them
with
some taxonomic support. The mite keys to Hirstiella Berlese in
Davidson
1958. Does anyone know of a key to the species?
From Newell & Ryckman 1964 and Jack & Girot 1965 I can tell
that it is not
H. pelaezi, pyriformis, or insignis (or H. trombidiiformis since this
mite
lacks a lateral eye), but near H. bakeri and H. boneti (i.e. two pairs
of
setae on the scutum). I haven't been able to track down the source
of
these names yet.
NB - for a first approximation, I would have guessed they belong to
the
Raphignathina rather than Anystina.
Cheers,
Dave Walter
Dr David Evans Walter
Department of Zoology & ENTOMOLOGY
Hartley-Teakle Building
The University of Queensland
St Lucia, QLD 4072 Australia
phone: 07-3365-1564
fax: (61) 7-3365-1922
Visit the Mite Image Gallery at:
http://www.uq.edu.au/entomology/mite/mitetxt.html
Greetings all!
I'm looking at some mites samples from a farmer's field. There is a
concern
of crop damage and the main critter I'm seeing is Bryobia. Does anyone
know
of a species level key for this genus? I'd appreciate any information.
Thanks in advance!
Regards,
Jeff
********************************************************************
Jeff Battigelli P.Ag., R.P.Bio.
Dept. of Biological Sciences
CW-405 Biological Sciences Bldg.
University of Alberta Voice:(780) 492-0463
Edmonton, AB
FAX : (780) 492-9234
T6G 2E9
email: jbattige@gpu.srv.ualberta.ca
********************************************************************
Chaos reigns within.
Reflect, repent, and reboot.
Order shall return.
At 9:11 AM -0600 6/7/1999, J. Battigelli wrote:
>Greetings all!
>I'm looking at some mites samples from a farmer's field. There is
a concern
>of crop damage and the main critter I'm seeing is Bryobia. Does anyone
know
>of a species level key for this genus? I'd appreciate any information.
There is a key to North American species in:
Baker, E.W. & D.M. Tuttle. 1994. A guide to the spider mites
(Tetranychidae) of the United States. Indira Publishing House,
West
Bloomfield, Michigan. 347pp.
Barry M. OConnor
phone: (734) 763-4354
Museum of Zoology
FAX: (734) 763-4080
University of Michigan
e-mail: bmoc@umich.edu
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1079 USA
Dear All,
I am wanting to make contact with persons working on, or with an interest
in
marine Hydrachnidia (Hydrachnellae?). Various species of these mites
are
appearing in our rocky-shore samples. We would be happy to exchange
specimens for their identification. If anyone is aware of such persons
not
on the list, I would be grateful to receive their addresses.
Kind regards
David Marshall
Dr David J Marshall
Department of Zoology
University of Durban-Westville
P/Bag X54001
Durban 4000
SOUTH AFRICA
Phone: +27-31-2044460 (NUMBER CHANGED)
Fax: +27-31-2044790
Dear All,
I am wanting to make contact with persons working on, or with an interest
in Mites :
House Dust, Stored Food, Feader, or others that could be found in House
Dust.
I Would be honored if you Dear Collegue could give me "references"
or some
books about it, and where find them !
Please send to :
Dr. Isaac Aisenberg Ferenhof , From Brazil , Ixodides Lab, Prof.
Serra-Freire's Team, FIOCRUZ.
We would be happy to have more specimens knoledge for their identification.
Thanking in advace for your time . effort wiht these "Fellow"
here,
Kind regards ,
[ ]'s
Isaac Ferenhof
e-mail <<< ferenhof@olimpo.com.br>>>
Dear All
Some researchers in the Microbiology Department here are experiencing
a
serious mite infestation of fungal cultures. They approached a horticultural
company and were given a list of names of miticides for possible use
(Abamectin, Acrinathrin, Azocyclotin, Cyhexatin, Bifenthrin, Chofentezine,
Amitraz, Fenpropathrin, Chlorphenapyl - active ingredients). My question
is,
are all of these equally effective in controlling the mites? If not
can
anyone advise, which should be used? Any other suggestions would be
welcome.
I have identified the mite as an astigmatid.
Regards
David
Dr David J Marshall
Department of Zoology
University of Durban-Westville
P/Bag X54001
Durban 4000
SOUTH AFRICA
Phone: +27-31-2044460 (NUMBER CHANGED)
Fax: +27-31-2044790
Dear Colleagues:
I prepared archives of all the messages posted on this list during the
last
two months and placed them on the acarology home page for future reference.
You may access it from the news section of the main page or go directly
to:
http://www.nhm.ac.uk/hosted_sites/acarology/archives.html
When I first started this list, I prepared archives but could not continue
due to the shortage of time. I like a volunteer from the list who is
willling to help me to maintain an archive page on the web for members.
If
you have kept most messages posted in the past and are willing to help
the
acarology community in this capacity, please let me know. We
can then
discuss how we can proceed.
Thank you for your attention!
Zhi-Qiang Zhang
Owner, Acarology list
Dr Zhi-Qiang Zhang
Acarologist, Landcare Research
Auckland, New Zealand
______________________________________________________
Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
Hi,
can anybody tell me where I can find a software programme to calculate
LT50
and LT95?
Would appreciate any insights or information,
Dr Michele Maroli
address
Istituto Superiore di Sanita'
Department of Parasitology
Viale Regina Elena, 299 - 00161 - Rome, Italy
Tel. ++39 06 49902302 - Fax ++39 06 49387065
e-mail: maroli@iss.it
home page ISS: http://www.iss.it
Just for your info. So serious problem highlighted
in so serious sources.
What going on? Why we are still without so serious
grants?..
---------------------------------------------------------------------
The Plite of the Humble bee
(scanned and recognized from Financial Times, June 12-13, 1999)
A tiny mite is threatening to wipe out the UK's honey bee, causing
environmental problems. Kevin Brown reports on the battle to save a
vital
friend of the farmer.
Summer has arrived at last, and the countryside is bursting into bloom:
The
birds are singing, butterflies waft gently by on the breeze, and in
the
fields the honey bees are buzzing. Or perhaps not.
Most people who live in the country will have noticed fewer bees around.
But
even country dwellers may not realise that Britain's bees are quite
literally fighting for survival. Some experts think they may lose,
with
nasty implications for farming and the environment.
The principal enemy is a tiny mite, only just big enough to be seen
with the
naked eye, called varroa jacobsoni. Discovered seven years ago in Devon,
south-west England, and Suffolk in the east, it has been marching steadily
northwards, and is now entrenched in virtually every English and Welsh
county. Ireland and Scotland are less affected, but both have had outbreaks.
Varroa is doubly lethal. It carries or "triggers" deadly viruses (no-one
is
quite sure which), and it buries itself in the sealed cells inside
the hive
where the larval bees pupate. There, it sucks out their bodily fluids.
The
bees emerge with damaged legs or wings, or are simply too weak to perform
their function in the complex life of the colony.
Varroa was first identified at the turn of the century living on an
Asian
honey bee species called apis cerana. No-one knows how or when it jumped
species to the European honey bee, apis mellifera. But by the 1990s
it was
widespread in continental Europe.
It probably crossed the English Channel as a result of illegal trading
of
queen bees to increase stocks, or in commercial shipping. The trade
was
outlawed to prevent varroa entering the UK. However it got here, varroa
has
been a disaster. British beekeepers say their bees seem to suffer more
than
those in mainland Europe, perhaps because the cooler, wetter weather
makes
the bees more susceptible to the mite or the associated viruses, or
both.
The agriculture ministry spends about œ1.3m ($2m) a year on research
into
bee health, mainly on varroa, and has put an extra œ250,000 into the
battle
this year. Two chemical treatments have now been licensed and are available
on plastic strips that can be stuck into hives. Beekeepers have also
developed a range of more traditional treatments, including formic
acid,
marjoram oil and lactic acid.
Traditional or chemical, the treatments seem to work. Beekeepers say
thousands of mites shower down through treated hives, looking like
little
black crabs. But treatments are ineffective over the long term. There
is no
way to stop bees from healthy colonies picking up mites from flowers
on
which they are
feeding. And other colonies become reinfected because drones - the male
bees
whose main job is to mate with the queen - sometimes move from one
hive to
another. The ministry's scientists say that national losses are about
30 per
cent of colonies a year.
Some areas have been much harder hit. In the southern county of Kent,
still
the garden of England and home to the bulk of Britain's soft fruit
growers,
losses have been as high as 90 per cent. This is a serious problem
for
farmers, for whom bees are one of the main ways of pollinating flowering
crops such as oilseed rape, linseed, field beans and fruits.
The Bee Farmers' Association runs a "bees on wheels" scheme called the
National Pollination Service that puts farmers and fruit growers in
touch
with beekeepers whose hives can be transported to the farm for a fee,
and
left there while pollination takes place. But varroa has so thinned
out bees
that farmers may now be 100 miles from the nearest bee farm big enough
for
the job.
"Unless it suddenly becomes very profitable, which is unlikely, I am
very
pessimistic," says Mike Williams, the pollination secretary of the
BFA. "I
think there may be a time in a few years when farmers will find it
very
difficult to get bees."
Varroa is also destroying millions of wild honey bees, the ones formerly
seen nesting in trees, or sometimes chimneys. Many areas in southern
England
that used to support 15 or 20 wild colonies in a couple of square miles
now
have none. "I would be surprised if there was a 100 per cent wipe out
of
wild honey bees, but I would not be surprised if 99 per cent disappeared,"
says Peter Dalby, chairman of the Beekeepers' Association's technical
group.
"This is quite serious. A honey bee colony can be 50,000 to 80,000 bees.
If
you have lost 20 colonies in a couple of square miles, that is a lot
of
pollinators gone, and it is going to have a big impact on the environment."
The good news for bee lovers is that bumble bees - the big stripy bees
most
often seen in gardens - are immune to varroa, as are more than 100
kinds of
solitary bees that inhabit the British Isles. But the bad news is that
these
bees are becoming less common too, because agriculture and tidier gardens
are destroying their habitat. Their numbers are simply too small, in
any
case, to replace the lost millions of honey bees.
Some arable farmers are setting up their own apiaries to help keep numbers
up. But varroa will not go away. "We are not going to overcome this,"
says
Medwyn Bew, head of the National Bee Unit. "It is possible to maintain
colonies in spite of it - that has been done in other parts of the
world.
But we are going to have to work very hard at it."
Dear friends,
I am in need of the following
reprint:
PUTMAN, W. L. 1939. The plum nursery mite(Phyllocoptes fockeui Nalepa
and Trt). Ann. Rep. Entomol. Soc. Ontario 70: 33-40.
Our library could not find
it locally. Would you be so kind as to
supply me with a copy.
Thanking you in anticipation
Regards
Eddie Ueckermann
ARC-Plant Protection Research Institute
Private Bag X134
Pretoria
0001 South Africa
Tel. No. +27-12-329 3272 x 221
Fax. No. +27-12-329 3278
E-mail: rieteau@plant2.agric.za
Hallo,
Can anybody help me with the e-mail address of Dr Thomas Schwalbe at
the
Staatliches Museum fur Naturkunde, Gorlitz, Germany.
Thank you in advance
Louise Coetzee
----------------------------------------------------------
Louise Coetzee Tel:
+ 27 51 4479609
Dept of Acarology Fax: + 27 51 4476273
National Museum acarol@nasmus.co.za
P.O. Box 266
www.nasmus.co.za
Bloemfontein
9300 South Africa