varroa mite – Michmutters
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Australia

Off-season native bee carers give macadamia farmer a pollination backup plan against varroa mite

“Foster parents” who take care of native beehives in their own backyards have helped a Queensland macadamia nut farmer develop a pollination backup plan should the invasive varroa mite spread.

Geoff Chivers started investigating using the small, stingless insects to pollinate his orchards, which were some of the oldest in Bundaberg, when varroa mite first started spreading around the world.

In five years, he has gone from five beehives to 150, which he said was made possible by a group of enthusiastic locals he called the “foster parents.”

“We need to have feed for those bees in the off-season,” he said.

“We actually host them out to families and friends in Bundaberg who have either large areas of native bush around them or backyards in the middle of town where there’s lots of flowering plants or vegetable patches.”

He was not looking for any new foster parents, with all of the beehives adopted and thriving in their host homes.

“We’ve found that the bees actually flourish in the urban environment because of the variety of flowers and other things that they can collect pollen from,” he said.

A mid shot of a man in a blue work shirt holding a small house-like native bee hive in front of a grevillia bush
Macadamia farmer Geoff Chivers has spent years researching and developing native bee hives for use in his orchard.(Rural ABC: Kallee Buchanan)

Macadamia trees have a short flowering window, and because orchards are large and surrounded by monoculture crops, the bees would not have enough food or variety without their host families.

“The foster parents love it, they really become attached to their hives,” he said.

“While we only need the hives for probably four to six weeks each year, they tell me they actually miss them when they’re gone.

“There’s a lot of people that just love to sit out and watch the bees come and go and just do what they do.”

Win-win for bees and community

All of Mr Chivers’ beehives currently have homes with foster parents like retiree Hugh O’Malley, whose wife Allison first suggested they get involved.

A wide shot of a white haired man resting his hand on a small native bee hive
Hugh O’Malley has been fostering native bees for three years.(Rural ABC: Kallee Buchanan)

“I’ve got a little vegetable garden and I’d had trouble with a lot of plants, like cucumbers for example, with pollination,” Mr O’Malley said.

“Since we’ve had the bees here, which we have for about three years, things like that are growing quite well.”

He said the bees were low-maintenance and easy to integrate into his existing garden.

“If they need any water they get it off a bit of dew off the grass and of course they know where to go for food,” he said.

“So I don’t have to do anything… I don’t use any sprays or anything like that, which is good for the bees.

“It’s nice to see them there, and they’re no problem because they don’t sting.”

It’s estimated about 90 per cent of the pollination for macadamia nuts is done by honey bees, but with the detection of the devastating varroa mite in New South Wales, farmers in Queensland have been considering their options should bee numbers drop significantly.

Patience pays off

Mr Chivers said it had taken years of experimentation and education to get the native bees working in his orchard, but he was seeing tangible results.

“We placed the bees around the outside of the orchard believing that they would move through the orchard,” he said.

“What we actually saw was around the outside of the orchard, we’re getting a much better nut set, but not so much into the orchard.

“We started experimenting [with] moving the hives actually inside the orchard… we put a grid pattern throughout the orchard so each hive is no more than 50 meters from another hive.”

In one of the oldest orchards in the district, he said kernel recovery — a measure of how much nut is inside the shell that determines what the grower is paid — had risen from 30 to 35 per cent.

A larger honey bee rests on a white flower beside a small stingless bee.
Native stingless bees (right) are not susceptible to the invasive varroa mite, which can devastate honey bee (left) colonies.(Supplied: Tobias Smith)

Some limits

While it was a success for his farm, Mr Chivers acknowledged there were limits to how much the bees could do in place of traditional honey bee pollination, particularly when it came to breeding and splitting beehives, which is a much slower process in the stingless varieties. .

“We couldn’t go out tomorrow and get enough hives to pollinate all the macadamia orchards or other farms around here, but we have enough now, I believe to pollinate, all our own farms,” ​​he said.

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Australia

WA biosecurity threats put Ord Valley agricultural region on edge

The recent spread of foot-and-mouth disease to Indonesia is not the only biosecurity battle for which farmers in WA’s easternmost agricultural region are bracing.

As the only growing region in WA that sits on an interstate border, the Ord Valley’s irrigated horticulture, broadacre cropping and sandalwood industries are on high alert as several dangerous pests and plant diseases creep further west.

Located just 40 kilometers from WA’s border with the Northern Territory on the outskirts of Kununurra, it is no stranger to biosecurity incursions.

It’s where the cane toad first crossed into the state more than a decade ago, and where the damaging fall armyworm affected the first WA broadacre crops in 2020.

It’s also close to where myrtle rust was found for the first time two months ago.

It’s feared mango shoot looper and banana freckle disease could be next after they were each detected in the Northern Territory this year.

Promising new project on hold

A man wearing fluoro yellow shirt holding log of wood in a shed
David Brocklehurst says the detection of myrtle rust has put a new project on hold.(ABC Kimberley: Courtney Fowler)

Sandalwood producer Santanol is among the hardest hit by the detection of myrtle rust on an East Kimberley pastoral station in June.

Myrtle rust is a fungal disease that can infect and kill plants in the myrtaceae family, such as eucalypts, bottlebrushes, paperbarks and peppermint trees.

While the disease poses no threat to Santanol’s primary sandalwood operation near Kununurra, a new pilot project targeting the cut flower and aromatic oil markets has been put on hold as a result of its spread to WA.

For commercial reasons, Santanol is remaining tight-lipped on the plant species being used in the pilot, but has confirmed it is part of the myrtaceae family.

Managing director David Brocklehurst said plans to expand the crop into broadacre trials this dry season were now too risky.

“We are very concerned that if the rust gets here and we’ve just planted 100,000 plants, then we would actually end up having nothing,” Mr Brocklehurst said.

“We’re keeping the plants well-quarantined and we’ll just see how this unfolds.”

The Department of Primary Industries said there had been no further detections of myrtle rust since its initial detection in June.

Horticulture sector on alert

Man in blue shirt inspecting green leaves and yellow flowers of mango trees.
Steve Angel is concerned about the detection of mango shoot looper in the Northern Territory.(ABC Kimberley: Stephanie Sinclair)

Meanwhile, the recent spread of mango shoot looper to the Northern Territory and detections of varroa mite in New South Wales has put Ord Valley mango growers on edge.

Mango shoot looper is an invasive pest that attacks mango and lychee plants while the varroa mite targets bees, which play a key role in the pollination of a variety of horticultural crops.

Swag Rural manager Steve Angel, who looks after WA’s biggest mango orchard on the outskirts of Kununurra, said he had limited vehicle movements across the property.

Mr Angel said he was also conducting regular checks of the orchard to ensure there was no sign of the pests.

He said the spread of either disease into WA would be devastating.

“If we didn’t control them and have preventive measures, there would be no sense being here,” Mr Angel said.

“People have got to be on the front foot and be aware, not on the back foot waiting for something, making contingency plans.

“We want to keep it out.”

Quarantined volumes soar

The back of a woman in yellow hi-vis watching a man open an esky in the back of a camper van.
A quarantine inspector checks a vehicle near Kununurra.(ABC Kimberley: Stephanie Sinclair)

Officers at the Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development’s quarantine checkpoint near Kununurra are the last line of defense in protecting the region from threats looming across the border.

According to new figures for the 2021-22 financial year, more than 14,000 kilograms of quarantine risk material was detected at the checkpoint, up more than 50 per cent from the previous year.

Supervising inspector Kenneth Bin Jacob said while the lifting of WA’s COVID-19 border restrictions largely contributed to the jump, the long-term trend showed more risk material was collected each year.

“We do see an increase each year — a slight increase,” he said.

“It never really goes backwards.”

Agriculture Minister Alannah MacTiernan said the state government had increased its biosecurity efforts in response to the outbreaks of plant diseases and pests in the Northern Territory.

“We are very aware of the risks of banana freckle and mango shoot looper and we’re working with the growers to up both our surveillance and our movement control,” she said.

“We’re also developing a broader biosecurity awareness program that we’ll be aiming at the punters, making sure that people understand that they’ve got a role to play.”

The heightened plant biosecurity concerns come at a time when Kimberley pastoralists are on alert for animal infections that have spread to Indonesia, including foot and mouth disease and lumpy skin disease.

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Australia

Sydney news: Political staffer, public servants to appear at Barilaro’s fourth US trade job hearing

Here’s what you need to know this morning.

Barilaro US trade job inquiry to meet again today

The New South Wales upper house inquiry into the appointment of former deputy premier John Barilaro to the lucrative US trade role will agree again on Friday.

An additional fourth hearing comes after the resignation of Trade Minister Stuart Ayres on Wednesday, following questions raised about his involvement in the process.

Mr Ayres denies any wrongdoing but will be investigated for a possible breach of the Ministerial Code of Conduct.

Mr Barilaro’s former chief of staff, Siobhan Hamblin, the managing director of Investment NSW, Kylie Bell, and the Public Sector Commissioner, Kathrina Lo, will give evidence from 10am.

Earlier in the week, in her second appearance before the committee, Investment NSW chief executive Amy Brown granted the appointment was not done “at arm’s length” from the state government.

Mr Barilaro — who has withdrawn from the $500,000-a-year job — is due to appear at the inquiry on Monday, August 8.

Meanwhile, the NSW opposition leader Chris Minns said it does not make sense to have highly paid Trade Commissioners based overseas when the state’s finances are under extreme pressure.

He said Labor would abolish the six Senior Trade and Investment Commissioner positions, if it wins the state election in March.

“The modern Australian economy, particularly when you’re chasing export opportunities, is so diverse and so big that a single person driving that agenda around the world just doesn’t make sense,” Mr Minns said.

COVID-19 cases in state slowdown

NSW Health says its latest surveillance data suggests that COVID-19 infections have peaked and hospital admissions have plateaued across the state.

The report — which analyzes the week ending July 30 — found the rate of COVID-19 notifications per 100,000 people had decreased, or remained stable, across all local health districts.

Infections have also decreased, or remained stable, across all age groups, except those aged between 10 and 19 years.

The seven-day, rolling average of daily hospital admissions also decreased by 14.8 per cent.

Meanwhile, the highly “sticky” BA.4 and BA.5 Omicron sub-variants are still the dominant strains, rising to 97 per cent of specimens sampled at the end of last week, compared to 94 per cent at the end of the previous week.

NSW Health says there is still no evidence of a difference in disease severity between these and previous Omicron variants.

Monkeypox doses available soon

A woman holds a mock-up vial labeled "Monkeypox vaccine"
The vaccine will be eligible for some people from Monday.(Reuters: Given Ruvic/Illustration)

Those most at risk from monkeypox in NSW can access the first doses of the smallpox vaccine from Monday 8 August, as part of a targeted rollout across the state.

NSW Health has secured the first 5,500 doses for high-risk groups, such as people with suppressed immune systems, sex workers and homeless men who have sex with men.

Chief Health Officer Dr Kerry Chant said doctors will identify people who should be vaccinated against Monkeypox and more information will be released in coming days about how to register interest.

Australia has recorded about 60 cases of Monkeypox, which is a usually mild disease similar to smallpox, and until May was endemic to Central and West Africa.

Another 30,000 doses will be delivered to the state next month.

Man charged with stalking teacher

A man has been charged with intimidating and stalking a teacher at Auburn in Sydney’s West.

Police say the 26-year-old threatened the teacher at the basketball courts of the PCYC on Wednesday.

He has been granted bail and is due to face court next week.

Natural disaster organization under fire

a man looking and standing outdoors
The future is unclear for Shane Fitzsimmons, who leads Resilience NSW.(AAP: Mick Tsikas)

New South Wales cabinet is expected to approve a recommendation to dismantle the organization created to lead the response to natural disasters.

A report into this year’s floods has recommended dismantling Resilience New South Wales.

Flood victims have criticized the organisation’s performance.

It’s thought the agency’s responsibilities will be reallocated to existing government departments.

Varroa mites spread

Varroa mite infestations have been identified at nine more properties in the Newscastle region.

The nine new detections bring the total number of infested premises to 73.

All of the new detections have been linked to other cases or to the movement of other hives and equipment, and were found within existing emergency zones.

Varroa mites spread viruses that cripple bees’ ability to fly, gather food and pollinate crops, leading hives to collapse and die off.

Australia was the last continent to be free of the parasite, with previous detections in Queensland and Victoria eradicated.

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Categories
Australia

Tocal queen bees to be moved as varroa mite red zone expands to include breeding program site

The New South Wales Agriculture Minister says as many queen bees as possible will be moved from a newly expanded varroa mite eradication zone to protect a national bee breeding program.

Varroa mite, which has devastated bee colonies around the world, has been detected at Butterwick, less than 10 kilometers from Tocal Agricultural College in the NSW Hunter region.

The NSW Department of Primary Industries-run college houses the national honey bee genetic improvement program, which supports beekeepers across the country.

The latest varroa mite detection takes the state’s total to 59, but Agriculture Minister Dugald Saunders has stressed that the mite has not been found at Tocal itself.

“[It] does not have infected hives — they’ve been monitored very regularly, but it does now fall within one of those red zones, so it is in an eradication zone,” he said.

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Mr Saunders said while the nearby detection was unfortunate but not completely unexpected, with 16,000 hives now having been inspected.

Mr Saunders said protocols had been developed over the past month to safeguard and move “some really, really high-value bee genetics that are housed at Tocal”.

“It will be as many as is feasible without feeling like we’re putting anyone else at risk,” he said.

“It’s not exactly formalized yet, but it would essentially mean that there would be a process where some bees could be moved in a small group, as in the queen bee with some of her nurse bees.

“[This would be achieved] by individually inspecting each and every one of those to make sure that they’re free of varroa mite and then moving them in a restricted space … to somewhere else to try and maintain those genetics.

“That would also include other queen bee breeders in that area.”

A blue sign in the middle of a paddock reads "bee research and training center" with an arrow in its direction.
The bee breeding program at Tocal plays a significant role across the country.(ABC Upper Hunter: Bridget Murphy)

‘bump in the road’

The aim of the national bee breeding program is to refine genetics and make bees more productive and less susceptible to disease, within Australia’s “unique environment”.

Elizabeth Frost, the technical specialist who co-manages the Plan Bee program, says the operation could be rebuilt if bees need to be eradicated for the greater good of the industry.

“We’re in a critical time in the response where it’s still possible to eradicate this pest and we need to give it our all to make that happen, because it’s the most globally damaging pest for honey bees,” she said.

“Even if the Tocal Plan Bee program can’t go ahead… it’s still represented around the nation.

“In the past few years of running this program we have developed the national database and the data we’ve generated from this population, and also genotyping … will live on beyond this population in the red zone.

“I couldn’t be more proud than that.”

Mr Saunders said the origin of the varroa mite outbreak was still under investigation and said the situation was “a small little bump in the road of genetic research”.

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Categories
Australia

Sydney news: Former NSW Premier John Barilaro plum job review outcome due ‘very shortly’

Here’s what you need to know this morning.

Barilaro appointment outcome imminent

New South Wales Premier Dominic Perrottet says he is expecting an independent review into the appointment of former deputy premier John Barilaro to a lucrative trade role in New York “very shortly”.

Mr Perrottet initiated the review in late June and it has been conducted alongside one by the parliament.

The Premier has cited the review — which could be delivered as early as this week — was a key reason why he was not commenting about details from a series of papers that have raised more questions about the recruitment process, including what involvement was had by the Trade Minister, Stuart Ayres.

Another candidate was recommended ahead of Mr Barilaro before he was later ranked higher, documents released yesterday revealed.

While Mr Perrottet’s stance created “politically challenging circumstances” for his cabinet colleagues, he said the review would be comprehensive.

New regulator can fine casinos

A new regulator will have the power to fine casino operators up to $100 million and hold individual board members and executives liable for serious wrongdoing.

Under legislation set to be introduced to Parliament next week, the NSW Independent Casino Commission (NICC) will be given tough controls to target money laundering and other criminal activity.

Minister for Hospitality and Racing, Kevin Anderson, said the reforms will deliver on all 19 recommendations from the Bergin Inquiry into Sydney’s Crown Casino.

“The NICC will have scope to deal appropriately with serious misconduct of the type uncovered by various recent inquiries,” he said.

Mr Anderson said the regulator would continue assessing Crown Sydney’s suitability to hold a casino license.

Additional measures to strengthen casinos’ compliance requirements, including the phase out of cash transactions over $1000, will also be introduced.

Pork barreling could be ‘corrupt’ behavior

ICAC
The report found politicians and their advisers “do not have an unfettered discretion to distribute public funds.”(ABC NEWS)

The state’s corruption watchdog has found politicians who engage in pork barreling could be found to be corrupt, under existing NSW laws.

A report by the Independent Commission Against Corruption founds politicians who pressure public servants or use grant programs for personal or political gain would be engaging in serious misconduct.

The report found politicians and their advisers “do not have an unfettered discretion to distribute public funds” and that the use of ministerial discretion is subject to the rule of law.

The ‘Report on Investigation into Pork Barrelling in NSW’ found politicians who allocate public funds for personal or political gain would be in breach of the ministerial standards or even in breach of the criminal offense of misconduct in public office.

The report follows an investigation into the NSW Government’s $250 million Stronger Communities Fund, in which 96 per cent of grants went to projects in Coalition-held seats.

Varroa mite spreads

The destructive varroa mite has been found in a further three beehive sites north of Newcastle.

NSW Department of Primary Industries says the new detections were in the Port Stephens area, at Butterwick and Salt Ash.

They fall within the existing eradication zone but the boundary will be pushed slightly west due to the detection at Butterwick.

There have now been 59 detections of the mite since it was first identified at the Port of Newcastle in late June.

The mite weakens and kills European honey bee colonies, which are vital to Australia’s honey and farming industries.

Well-known Indigenous organization to close

National Center of Indigenous Excellence
The NCIE looks set to close after lengthy negotiations to keep it doors open failed. (Supplied: NCIE)

An Indigenous non-for-profit in Redfern is set to close after the two parties involved its transition process failed to reach agreement on the organisation’s future.

The National Center of Indigenous Excellence could close its doors by next Monday after the Indigenous Land and Sea Corporation failed to find a suitable arrangement with new owners, the NSW Aboriginal Land Council.

It follows a two-year due diligence process in which the Land and Sea Corporation divested the site to the land council.

The center provides programs and services to the local Indigenous community to improve wellbeing.

Up to 50 staff are expected to lose their jobs.

Police officer assaulted

Three boys have been arrested after allegedly assaulting an off-duty police officer with a bike seat pole in Sydney’s west yesterday.

The boys were allegedly behaving in an offensive manner at Rooty Hill Railway Station around 4:25am and abusing passengers and railway staff.

A chief inspector attached to a command within the North West Region placed one of the boys under arrest, however, it is alleged the boy resisted before verbally abusing and assaulting the officer.

It’s alleged the officer was struck multiple times to the head with a bike seat pole.

Further police from Mt Druitt police area command attended and arrested the boys.

NSW Ambulance paramedics treated the officer at the scene before he was taken to Blacktown Hospital with head injuries. He was treated and later released.

The boys — aged 14, 13 and 12 — were refused bail and will appear at the Children’s court today.

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