Province limits Ontario bee imports in light of beetle infestations - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 05:03 AM | Calgary | -11.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
PEI

Province limits Ontario bee imports in light of beetle infestations

The province is limiting the import of Ontario bees that may live in, or have had contact with, quarantined zones infested with small hive beetles.

'The best strategy for the blueberry industry is to have a vibrant local beekeeping community'

Island beekeepers are keeping a watchful eye on their colonies as small hive beetle infestations pop up in the Maritimes. (Dann Mackenzie/CBC)

The province is limiting the import of Ontario beesthat may live in, or have had contact with, quarantined zones infested with small hive beetles.

The Department of Agriculturecancelled some import permits in May when it was discovered quarantines for this honey-destroying pest weren't always working.

Imports were being brought in to help Island beekeeperspollinatethis years blueberry crops.

Several N.B. colonies infested

"What the association had lobbied for previously, was that if bees were going to come in they would come in from small hive beetle-free areas," said DaveMacNearney, chair of the P.E.I. Beekeepers Association.

The best strategy for the blueberry industry is to have a vibrant local beekeeping community so they don't have to rely on imports. Dave MacNearney

The request for beetle-free bees follows growing concerns of small hive beetle infestations in Ontario that have been troublesome for several years.

In June of this year, several colonies in New Brunswick were quarantined after the small,pinhead-sized pests made their way to the Maritimes, ruining honey crops in the Acadian Peninsula.

Last year, the province allowed imported bees only from the non-quarantined area, MacNearney said.

The small hive beetle crawls its way into the colony and ruins honey, though it reportedly doesn't harm the bees themselves.

It tried the same approach this year, but McNearneysaid they realized somesmall hive beetles may haveescaped the quarantine.

The association alerted the province, which cancelled some permits in May, but didallow some importsfrom certain beetle-free areas.

Ideally, MacNearney said, P.E.I. would have its own, self-sustaining bee population.

"The best strategy for the blueberry industry is to have a vibrant local beekeeping community so they don't have to rely on imports," he said.

With files from Laura Chapin