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Why BIBBA?
The rationale for BIBBA
From the 1920s it was often supposed, and still is in some circles, that both native and
recently imported subspecies of honeybees in the British Isles were largely wiped out
between 1905 and 1919 by an infectious disease, namely acarine or tracheal mite
('Isle of Wight disease'). Subsequent restocking with imported subspecies was believed to
have rendered native strains effectively extinct.
Brother Adam and other influential beekeepers promoted this view, possibly for commercial
interests. This however, was shown to be without any scientific basis by, for example,
Dr. Leslie Bailey
(Honey Bee Pathology, London 1981: Academic Press; pp. 60ff., 81ff.) and more recent work
using DNA analysis has confirmed that the wipe-out was a myth.
Already many observant beekeepers had protested that their native strains of bees had
survived unscathed through the Isle of Wight episode, including Terence F. Theaker, one of
the founder members of BIBBA. Others had come to the same conclusion with the aid of more
systematic morphometric and behavioural studies. One such was Beowulf A. Cooper, who from
the 1950s through the 1970s was employed as an agricultural entomologist by the then
Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food. It was largely on his initiative that BIBBA
was founded and he directed BIBBA until his death in 1982.
Since Beowulf Cooper's death the whole basis of the taxonomy of honeybee subspecies has been
revolutionised by the technique of DNA analysis as well as by more sophisticated
morphometric methods, which continue to evolve and increase in accuracy. These methods have
fully confirmed the status of many of the honeybees of Britain and Ireland as members of
Apis mellifera mellifera, the native subspecies widely distributed in Europe north
of the Alps and Pyrenees. BIBBA is proud to have contributed to these efforts.
History and activities of BIBBA
BIBBA was formally constituted as the Village Bee Breeders' Association (VBBA) at Alne,
Yorkshire on June 13th 1964, after an inaugural meeting held on July 27th 1963 at the
apiary of Terence Theaker, Leadenham, Lincolnshire. The name 'village bee' was intended to
refer to the small-colony nature and local adaption of the native bees of Britain and
Ireland.
At the 1972 Annual General Meeting the name of the Association was changed to the British
Isles Bee Breeders' Association (BIBBA), 'in order to make our identity comprehensible to
our continental counterparts, with whom we shall be building up increasing relationships
now that both the Irish Republic and the UK have become part of the European Community'.
At the 1997 Annual General Meeting the name of the Association was changed again to the Bee
Improvement and Bee Breeders' Association as the Isles involved are not all British,
(retaining the same acronym of BIBBA) to reflect
the further internationalisation of the efforts to conserve and improve the Dark European
Honey bee (Apis mellifera mellifera L.), to which subspecies the native bees of
Britain and Ireland belong.
Since its inception, BIBBA has sought to pursue its aims by...
Producing and distributing publications
Encouraging the formation of local Bee Breeding Groups
Holding Conferences, Workshops and Lectures
Cooperating with similar organisations and with scientific institutions (particularly
in the British Isles and Continental Europe) in research and educational activities.
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