تصاوير بيماري لوك امريكائي(زبان اصلي)
ارسال شده: جمعه ۱۳ بهمن ۱۳۹۱, ۷:۳۰ ب.ظ
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Normal Brood Development
In order to diagnose AFB, it is important to understand the process of normal worker bee development. Identifying brood symptoms involves comparing the appearance of brood that looks abnormal with the appearance of healthy brood. Three days after the queen lays an egg it hatches into a pearly white larva. At this stage, the larva appears as a small c-shape in the bottom of the cell.
The developmental stages of healthy worker brood
Over a 4 day period, the larva remains in this c-shape, greatly increasing in size until it appears to completely fill up the cell. On the 8th day (after the egg was laid), the larva stretches out along the lower wall of the cell in preparation for changing into the adult form (called the “prepupal stage”). On the 9th day, the cell is capped over with wax by house bees.On the 12th day, the larva pupates and the form of the adult bee takes shape. The pupa is initially white in appearance, but gradually changes into its adult colouration. On the 21st day, the new adult worker bee chews a hole in the capping and emerges.
Development of Brood Infected with American Foulbrood
The developmental stages of worker brood infected with AFB are outlined (see below). Larvae are most susceptible to AFB infection when they are less than 24 hours old. Millions of spores are required to infect a larva more than 2 days old, but larvae up to 24 hours old can become infected with ten spores or fewer.
The developmental stages of worker brood infected with AFB
Although the AFB vegetative rods multiply in the gut of the larva, they do not penetrate the gut wall and multiply in its tissues until it stretches out before pupation (prepupal stage). Visual disease symptoms do not become apparent until death occurs, either just before or just after the larva pupates. Infected larvae do not usually exhibit disease symptoms until after the cells have been capped. Where uncapped diseased larvae and pupae are found it is usually because the cappings have been removed by house bees.
VISUAL SYMPTOMS
Colour of Cell Cappings
The first observable symptom of AFB is usually a change in the appearance of cell cappings. Healthy cappings are raised in shape, and range in colour from light to dark brown. Cappings covering infected cells will initially be the same colour as the uninfected cells surrounding them. However, infected cells will eventually become darker in colour until they appear black. Infected cells also develop a moist, almost greasy appearance and become sunken.
Healthy cell capping
Dark sunken cell capping
Holes in Cappings
Even though initially there may be no visible change in the colour of the capping of an infected cell, worker bees can still identify a problem within, and will chew holes in the capping before removing the contents of the cell. The holes can usually be distinguished from holes in the unfinished capping of healthy cells. The holes in infected cell cappings have a more irregular appearance.
Holes will also be created in healthy cells when the young adult worker bees chew apart the cappings to release themselves from cells. These holes will also appear irregular in appearance, but can be easily distinguished from infected cells since a live adult bee will be found underneath the capping.
A cell capping with a hole chewed in it
A cell capping in the process of being sealed
A hole in a capping caused by an emerging bee
Type of Brood
Symptoms of AFB are normally only found in worker larvae and pupae. However, on rare occasions symptoms will be found in drone brood (generally only in heavy infections). Symptoms of the disease are also occasionally found in queen cells.
“Spotty” Brood Pattern
Because larvae infected with AFB fail to emerge, infected cells are often surrounded by empty cells or by younger, healthy larvae. As a result, the brood in a colony with a heavy AFB infection often takes on a spotty pattern. Worker brood in a healthy hive generally has a more solid pattern, caused by the queen laying eggs of similar age in a number of adjacent cells. The eggs develop into larvae and are capped by the house bees at approximately the same time. “Spotty” brood patterns can also be caused by other factors in the colony not related to AFB however, such as laying workers, a failing or inbred queen, or a range of other honey bee diseases.
Spotty brood pattern
Healthy brood pattern
Colour of Brood
Healthy larvae and freshly capped pupae are pearly white in colour. Infected larvae and pupae change from pearly white to a brown colour resembling coffee with milk. The distinctive coffee-brown colour is often considered a definitive symptom of AFB, although brownish-coloured larvae can sometimes be found that have died from causes other than AFB. There is also a significant variation in the colour of AFB infected larvae and pupae, ranging from very pale brown to almost black. The variation depends on the progression of the disease and the degree of drying of the diseased material. After about a month, the infected larvae or pupae will dry out completely and turn totally black. Dried out, infected larvae and pupae are commonly referred to as “scale”.
Healthy prepupa
Coffee coloured AFB
Pupal scale with tongue
Shape of Brood
Healthy larvae and pupae are characteristically plump in shape. In healthy larvae at the prepupal stage, the circular lines of segmentation are clearly visible. In healthy pupae, the shape of all of the external body parts can be seen. When an AFB infection occurs, the first symptom is often a slight change in the colour of the prepupae or pupae. As the infection develops and the brood tissues are consumed, the remains slump down onto the lower wall of the cell. In diseased larvae in the prepupal stage, the lines of segmentation can no longer be determined easily. In diseased pupae, the body parts lose most of their characteristic shape, although the tongue remains upright and prominent.
Healthy pupa
Early stage AFB infected pupa
Position in Cell
Larvae infected with AFB are only ever found stretched out along the lower wall of the cell (prepupal stage). Infected larvae are never found in the c-shape of younger larvae, since the disease-causing bacteria do not penetrate the gut wall until just before the larvae pupate. Prepupae infected with AFB are always found in the characteristic prepupal position, stretched out along the lower wall of the cell, with the head closest to the cell entrance.
Diseased prepupae and pupae are always stretched along the lower wall of its cell
A very early stage AFB infected prepupa slumped on the lower cell wall
An early stage AFB infected prepupa slumped on the lower cell wall
An AFB prepupa slumped on the lower wall of a cell
Pupal Tongue
When larvae and pupae killed by AFB dry out and turn to scale, their flat shape can make them difficult to identify. Remains of larvae can be especially hard to see, since the scale lies completely flat along the lower wall of the cell. Remains of pupae are generally easier to identify, since a thin thread (which is the dried remains of the pupal tongue) can sometimes be seen pointing directly across the face of the cell, from the bottom angle to the top angle of the hexagon. Seeing a tongue, either in a moist, coffee-brown coloured sunken pupae, or in pupal scale, is a definitive diagnosis of AFB, since no other disease is likely to produce such a symptom.
Infected pupa with tongue stretched across the cell
The presence of a pupal tongue stretching across the cell can be used to reliably diagnose AFB.
Smell
Larvae and pupae infected with AFB can exhibit a characteristic foul smell similar to dead fish (hence the name “foulbrood”). The intensity of the smell varies considerably, depending on the number of infected larvae and pupae present and factors such as temperature. Smell should therefore not be relied upon to determine the presence or absence of AFB, no matter whether the disease is in live colonies, dead colonies or stored combs.
The foul smell that can accompany AFB should not be relied upon to determine the presence or absence of AFB.
“Ropiness” of Brood
Larvae and pupae infected with AFB display a characteristic “ropiness” when a small stick is used to slightly stir the diseased tissue in the cell and then the stick is slowly removed The ropiness is thought to be caused by the presence of long chains of the vegetative stage of AFB bacteria intertwining and producing an elastic, binding effect. The ropiness test is a common technique used to diagnose American foulbrood.
Ropiness test
A positive ropiness test will almost always correctly diagnose AFB.
Fluorescence of Scale
AFB scales have been shown to fluoresce when examined under ultraviolet light with a wavelength of 360 nm. As pollen and some moulds also fluoresce, ultraviolet light should not be relied upon to positively identify AFB infections.
Sourced from National Pest Management Strategy, New Zealand
[/JUSTIFY]
Normal Brood Development
In order to diagnose AFB, it is important to understand the process of normal worker bee development. Identifying brood symptoms involves comparing the appearance of brood that looks abnormal with the appearance of healthy brood. Three days after the queen lays an egg it hatches into a pearly white larva. At this stage, the larva appears as a small c-shape in the bottom of the cell.
The developmental stages of healthy worker brood
Over a 4 day period, the larva remains in this c-shape, greatly increasing in size until it appears to completely fill up the cell. On the 8th day (after the egg was laid), the larva stretches out along the lower wall of the cell in preparation for changing into the adult form (called the “prepupal stage”). On the 9th day, the cell is capped over with wax by house bees.On the 12th day, the larva pupates and the form of the adult bee takes shape. The pupa is initially white in appearance, but gradually changes into its adult colouration. On the 21st day, the new adult worker bee chews a hole in the capping and emerges.
Development of Brood Infected with American Foulbrood
The developmental stages of worker brood infected with AFB are outlined (see below). Larvae are most susceptible to AFB infection when they are less than 24 hours old. Millions of spores are required to infect a larva more than 2 days old, but larvae up to 24 hours old can become infected with ten spores or fewer.
The developmental stages of worker brood infected with AFB
Although the AFB vegetative rods multiply in the gut of the larva, they do not penetrate the gut wall and multiply in its tissues until it stretches out before pupation (prepupal stage). Visual disease symptoms do not become apparent until death occurs, either just before or just after the larva pupates. Infected larvae do not usually exhibit disease symptoms until after the cells have been capped. Where uncapped diseased larvae and pupae are found it is usually because the cappings have been removed by house bees.
VISUAL SYMPTOMS
Colour of Cell Cappings
The first observable symptom of AFB is usually a change in the appearance of cell cappings. Healthy cappings are raised in shape, and range in colour from light to dark brown. Cappings covering infected cells will initially be the same colour as the uninfected cells surrounding them. However, infected cells will eventually become darker in colour until they appear black. Infected cells also develop a moist, almost greasy appearance and become sunken.
Healthy cell capping
Dark sunken cell capping
Holes in Cappings
Even though initially there may be no visible change in the colour of the capping of an infected cell, worker bees can still identify a problem within, and will chew holes in the capping before removing the contents of the cell. The holes can usually be distinguished from holes in the unfinished capping of healthy cells. The holes in infected cell cappings have a more irregular appearance.
Holes will also be created in healthy cells when the young adult worker bees chew apart the cappings to release themselves from cells. These holes will also appear irregular in appearance, but can be easily distinguished from infected cells since a live adult bee will be found underneath the capping.
A cell capping with a hole chewed in it
A cell capping in the process of being sealed
A hole in a capping caused by an emerging bee
Type of Brood
Symptoms of AFB are normally only found in worker larvae and pupae. However, on rare occasions symptoms will be found in drone brood (generally only in heavy infections). Symptoms of the disease are also occasionally found in queen cells.
“Spotty” Brood Pattern
Because larvae infected with AFB fail to emerge, infected cells are often surrounded by empty cells or by younger, healthy larvae. As a result, the brood in a colony with a heavy AFB infection often takes on a spotty pattern. Worker brood in a healthy hive generally has a more solid pattern, caused by the queen laying eggs of similar age in a number of adjacent cells. The eggs develop into larvae and are capped by the house bees at approximately the same time. “Spotty” brood patterns can also be caused by other factors in the colony not related to AFB however, such as laying workers, a failing or inbred queen, or a range of other honey bee diseases.
Spotty brood pattern
Healthy brood pattern
Colour of Brood
Healthy larvae and freshly capped pupae are pearly white in colour. Infected larvae and pupae change from pearly white to a brown colour resembling coffee with milk. The distinctive coffee-brown colour is often considered a definitive symptom of AFB, although brownish-coloured larvae can sometimes be found that have died from causes other than AFB. There is also a significant variation in the colour of AFB infected larvae and pupae, ranging from very pale brown to almost black. The variation depends on the progression of the disease and the degree of drying of the diseased material. After about a month, the infected larvae or pupae will dry out completely and turn totally black. Dried out, infected larvae and pupae are commonly referred to as “scale”.
Healthy prepupa
Coffee coloured AFB
Pupal scale with tongue
Shape of Brood
Healthy larvae and pupae are characteristically plump in shape. In healthy larvae at the prepupal stage, the circular lines of segmentation are clearly visible. In healthy pupae, the shape of all of the external body parts can be seen. When an AFB infection occurs, the first symptom is often a slight change in the colour of the prepupae or pupae. As the infection develops and the brood tissues are consumed, the remains slump down onto the lower wall of the cell. In diseased larvae in the prepupal stage, the lines of segmentation can no longer be determined easily. In diseased pupae, the body parts lose most of their characteristic shape, although the tongue remains upright and prominent.
Healthy pupa
Early stage AFB infected pupa
Position in Cell
Larvae infected with AFB are only ever found stretched out along the lower wall of the cell (prepupal stage). Infected larvae are never found in the c-shape of younger larvae, since the disease-causing bacteria do not penetrate the gut wall until just before the larvae pupate. Prepupae infected with AFB are always found in the characteristic prepupal position, stretched out along the lower wall of the cell, with the head closest to the cell entrance.
Diseased prepupae and pupae are always stretched along the lower wall of its cell
A very early stage AFB infected prepupa slumped on the lower cell wall
An early stage AFB infected prepupa slumped on the lower cell wall
An AFB prepupa slumped on the lower wall of a cell
Pupal Tongue
When larvae and pupae killed by AFB dry out and turn to scale, their flat shape can make them difficult to identify. Remains of larvae can be especially hard to see, since the scale lies completely flat along the lower wall of the cell. Remains of pupae are generally easier to identify, since a thin thread (which is the dried remains of the pupal tongue) can sometimes be seen pointing directly across the face of the cell, from the bottom angle to the top angle of the hexagon. Seeing a tongue, either in a moist, coffee-brown coloured sunken pupae, or in pupal scale, is a definitive diagnosis of AFB, since no other disease is likely to produce such a symptom.
Infected pupa with tongue stretched across the cell
The presence of a pupal tongue stretching across the cell can be used to reliably diagnose AFB.
Smell
Larvae and pupae infected with AFB can exhibit a characteristic foul smell similar to dead fish (hence the name “foulbrood”). The intensity of the smell varies considerably, depending on the number of infected larvae and pupae present and factors such as temperature. Smell should therefore not be relied upon to determine the presence or absence of AFB, no matter whether the disease is in live colonies, dead colonies or stored combs.
The foul smell that can accompany AFB should not be relied upon to determine the presence or absence of AFB.
“Ropiness” of Brood
Larvae and pupae infected with AFB display a characteristic “ropiness” when a small stick is used to slightly stir the diseased tissue in the cell and then the stick is slowly removed The ropiness is thought to be caused by the presence of long chains of the vegetative stage of AFB bacteria intertwining and producing an elastic, binding effect. The ropiness test is a common technique used to diagnose American foulbrood.
Ropiness test
A positive ropiness test will almost always correctly diagnose AFB.
Fluorescence of Scale
AFB scales have been shown to fluoresce when examined under ultraviolet light with a wavelength of 360 nm. As pollen and some moulds also fluoresce, ultraviolet light should not be relied upon to positively identify AFB infections.
Sourced from National Pest Management Strategy, New Zealand
[/JUSTIFY]