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AHB headed to Central Valley?

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California Agriculture 53(2):4-4.

Published March 01, 1999

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Four dogs were killed and 14 people were injured by Africanized honey bees in 1998 in Riverside and Imperial counties and several people were stung numerous times in San Bernadino County. These aggressive bees, which have stung people to death in other parts of the country, have invaded the Los Angeles area and are wending their way north.

With the March 5 find of Africanized honey bees in Calabasas, the expansion of Africanized honey bees encompasses Imperial and San Bernadino counties and parts of San Diego, Los Angeles, Riverside and Ventura counties.

With the March 5 find of Africanized honey bees in Calabasas, the expansion of Africanized honey bees encompasses Imperial and San Bernadino counties and parts of San Diego, Los Angeles, Riverside and Ventura counties.

A long battle with mites apparently hampered the northward flight of Africanized honey bees (AHB) in California, but UC Davis bee specialists believe they eventually will spread to the San Joaquin Valley. “The bees' movement into the valley is not a matter of if, only a matter of when,” says UC Davis graduate student David Nielsen.

After observing a large spike in AHB numbers in the state in 1997, Nielsen and UC David entomologist Robert Page have found this rapid increase is continuing.

Nielsen and Page, who have been monitoring AHB's progress since 1995, report that in 1998 nearly a quarter of the bees they collected from the southeastern region of the state were Africanized. In 1997, 7% of the bees they captured were Africanized.

The bees have not only increased in number but also greatly in range. The bees have since moved well north into the Mojave Desert with the outermost finds near Victorville, Barstow and Las Vegas. The extensive desert bloom in the spring following the wet winter of 1997 may have provided additional foraging opportunities.

During 1998, the scientists also found Africanized bees near 5,000 feet in the mountains surrounding the L.A. Basin. Advancement into the L.A. Basin shows the AHB's ability to overcome environmental barriers and exploit new habitat. Nielsen says AHB finds near Barstow in 1998 indicate it is likely that the bees have since moved toward the base of the Tehachapis — the mountain range separating the Mojave Desert from the San Joaquin Valley.

The many new AHB finds in the L.A. Basin in 1999 are evidence that the bees have successfully colonized this region. Human activities, ample food and abundant water create an ideal environment year-round for Africanized bees to greatly increase their numbers. The mild coastal conditions, available forage and lack of mountainous barriers will allow the bees to spread easily along the coastline to neighboring areas such as San Diego and Santa Barbara.

“The extent of the bees potential northern advancement is unknown,” Nielsen says, “but Monterey and San Francisco are very feasible destinations. Once the coast is colonized, movement into the Central Valley from these coastal regions is extremely likely due to the low elevation of the Coast Range.”

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AHB headed to Central Valley?

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AHB headed to Central Valley?

Share using any of the popular social networks Share by sending an email Print article
Share using any of the popular social networks Share by sending an email Print article

Authors

Editors

Publication Information

California Agriculture 53(2):4-4.

Published March 01, 1999

PDF  |  Citation  |  Permissions

Full text

Four dogs were killed and 14 people were injured by Africanized honey bees in 1998 in Riverside and Imperial counties and several people were stung numerous times in San Bernadino County. These aggressive bees, which have stung people to death in other parts of the country, have invaded the Los Angeles area and are wending their way north.

With the March 5 find of Africanized honey bees in Calabasas, the expansion of Africanized honey bees encompasses Imperial and San Bernadino counties and parts of San Diego, Los Angeles, Riverside and Ventura counties.

With the March 5 find of Africanized honey bees in Calabasas, the expansion of Africanized honey bees encompasses Imperial and San Bernadino counties and parts of San Diego, Los Angeles, Riverside and Ventura counties.

A long battle with mites apparently hampered the northward flight of Africanized honey bees (AHB) in California, but UC Davis bee specialists believe they eventually will spread to the San Joaquin Valley. “The bees' movement into the valley is not a matter of if, only a matter of when,” says UC Davis graduate student David Nielsen.

After observing a large spike in AHB numbers in the state in 1997, Nielsen and UC David entomologist Robert Page have found this rapid increase is continuing.

Nielsen and Page, who have been monitoring AHB's progress since 1995, report that in 1998 nearly a quarter of the bees they collected from the southeastern region of the state were Africanized. In 1997, 7% of the bees they captured were Africanized.

The bees have not only increased in number but also greatly in range. The bees have since moved well north into the Mojave Desert with the outermost finds near Victorville, Barstow and Las Vegas. The extensive desert bloom in the spring following the wet winter of 1997 may have provided additional foraging opportunities.

During 1998, the scientists also found Africanized bees near 5,000 feet in the mountains surrounding the L.A. Basin. Advancement into the L.A. Basin shows the AHB's ability to overcome environmental barriers and exploit new habitat. Nielsen says AHB finds near Barstow in 1998 indicate it is likely that the bees have since moved toward the base of the Tehachapis — the mountain range separating the Mojave Desert from the San Joaquin Valley.

The many new AHB finds in the L.A. Basin in 1999 are evidence that the bees have successfully colonized this region. Human activities, ample food and abundant water create an ideal environment year-round for Africanized bees to greatly increase their numbers. The mild coastal conditions, available forage and lack of mountainous barriers will allow the bees to spread easily along the coastline to neighboring areas such as San Diego and Santa Barbara.

“The extent of the bees potential northern advancement is unknown,” Nielsen says, “but Monterey and San Francisco are very feasible destinations. Once the coast is colonized, movement into the Central Valley from these coastal regions is extremely likely due to the low elevation of the Coast Range.”

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