Artículos de revistas
Multi-country loss rates of honey bee colonies during winter 2016/2017 from the COLOSS survey
Fecha
2018-05-08Autor
Brodschneider, Robert
Gray, Alison
Adjlane, Noureddine
Ballis, Alexis
Brusbardis, Valters
Charrière, Jean-Daniel
Chlebo, Robert
F Coffey, Mary
Dahle, Bjørn
C de Graaf, Dirk
Maja Dražić, Marica
Evans, Garth
Fedoriak, Mariia
Forsythe, Ivan
Gregorc, Aleš
Grzęda, Urszula
Hetzroni, Amots
Kauko, Lassi
Kristiansen, Preben
Martikkala, Maritta
Martín Hernández, Raquel
Medina Flores, Carlos Aurelio
Mutinelli, Franco
Raudmets, Aivar
Ryzhikov, Vladimir A
Simon Delso, Noa
Stevanovic, Jevrosima
Uzunov, Aleksandar
Vejsnæs, Flemming
Wöhl, Saskia
Zammit Mangion, Marion
Danihlík, Jiří
Institución
Resumen
In this short note we present comparable loss rates of honey bee colonies during winter 2016/2017 from 27 European
countries plus Algeria, Israel and Mexico, obtained with the COLOSS questionnaire. The 14,813 beekeepers providing
valid loss data collectively wintered 425,762 colonies, and reported 21,887 (5.1%, 95% confidence interval 5.0–5.3%)
colonies with unsolvable queen problems and 60,227 (14.1%, 95% CI 13.8–14.4%) dead colonies after winter. Addition-
ally we asked for colonies lost due to natural disaster, which made up another 6,903 colonies (1.6%, 95% CI 1.5–1.7%).
This results in an overall loss rate of 20.9% (95% CI 20.6–21.3%) of honey bee colonies during winter 2016/2017, with
marked differences among countries. The overall analysis showed that small operations suffered higher losses than lar-
ger ones (p < 0.001). Overall migratory beekeeping had no significant effect on the risk of winter loss, though there
was an effect in several countries. A table is presented giving detailed results from 30 countries. A map is also included,
showing relative risk of colony winter loss at regional level.