1.1 |
In its Honeybee R&D Five Year Plan 2007–2012, RIRDC outlined the following research objectives:
- Pest and disease protection;
- Productivity and profitability enhancement to lift beekeeper income;
- Resource access security and knowledge;
- Pollination research;
Income diversification including new project development; and
Extension, communication and capacity.1
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1.2 |
The first objective, with 45% of the allocated funding, is pest and disease protection. The proposed outcomes within this objective are:
- To be prepared for exotic pest and disease incursion before they occur and to evaluate and have in place management strategies prior to any such incursion (including an emergency and surveillance response);
- To prevent the establishment of exotic pests and diseases of economic significance; and
- To manage endemic pests and diseases that impact on beekeeper profitability.
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1.3 |
Identified strategies to meet these objectives include:
- Research New Zealand’s experience with Varroa destructor incursion and ensure response strategies for Australia are appropriate/best practice;
- Undertake appropriate genetic research to improve resistance/tolerance to Varroa destructor;
- Undertake Tropilaelaps clareae mite research and ensure incursion response strategies are appropriate/best practice;
- Research the implications of Africanised gene establishment in Australia;
- Invest in Small Hive Beetle (Aethina tumida) control to arrest its spread and economic impact;
- Increase awareness of the need to manage and control endemic pests and diseases including Nosema apis, American Foulbrood, European Foulbrood, Chalkbrood and sacbrood virus;
- Develop American Foulbrood scent detection equipment;
- Encourage beekeeper participation and commitment to the honey bee industry’s quality assurance program with its requirements for pest/disease control and chemical residue management; and
- Develop non-chemical controls for pest and diseases to ensure Australian apiary products are contaminant free.
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1.4 |
Performance indicators for these measures include:
- Early detection of Varroa and Tropilaelaps incursions should these occur;
- Cost effective non-chemical controls for Small Hive Beetle and other pests and diseases of economic significance by 2010;
- Reduction in production losses caused by pests and diseases;
- Increased industry participation in the industry’s quality assurance program to stem the spread of pests and diseases.2
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1.5 |
The second objective, with 15% of the allocated funding, is productivity and profitability enhancement. The proposed outcomes within this objective are:
- To encourage a culture of constant improvement in bee husbandry and bee management in the Australian beekeeping industry;
- To provide an across-the-board lift to Australian beekeeping industry productivity and profitability and address the industry’s declining terms of trade; and
- To focus productivity improvement on bee genetics, best management practices and industry benchmarking.
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1.6 |
Strategies to achieve these objectives include:
- Facilitate genetic improvements to increase hive productivity and disease resistance;
- Prepare and communicate a comprehensive set of industry Best Management Practice guides; and
- Undertake industry production and financial benchmarking to raise average industry yield and reduce yield spread for beekeepers working under similar conditions.
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1.7 |
Performance indicators for these measures (using 2003 data as a comparison) include:
- 10% increase in average hive yield by 2012 allowing for seasonal variability;
- 10% reduction in yield spread for beekeepers working under similar conditions at the same time;
- 20% increase in beekeeper profitability.3
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1.8 |
The third objective, resource access security and knowledge, with 10% of allocated funding, targets the following outcomes:
- To ensure adequate resources are available to sustain a profitable and productive honey bee industry;
- To win back a share of native forest access lost in previous resource allocation decisions;
- To better understand the native floral resource on which the industry depends; and
- To address the implications of climate change on the Australian apiary industry.
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1.9 |
Strategies to achieve these objectives include:
- Communication to policy makers of the importance of public forest access to the continued viability of the Apiary industry;
- Invest R&D funds in research to better understand the interaction between native flora/fauna and honey bees;
- Support the development of a national code of conduct for public native forestry use;
- Communicate the importance of bushfire control in maintaining the floral resource;
- Develop technologies and techniques for determining floral resource yields;
- Invest in research to determine native flora flowering cycles;
- Update and improve the accuracy of the Queensland Floral database, examine the needs for similar resources in other states; and
- Determine climate change impact on honeybee production by assembling up to date climate research findings and drawing out implications for floral production.
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1.10 |
Performance indicators for these measures include:
- No further loss in bee sites in public lands;
- 10% increase in bee sites on public lands by 2012;
- Improved understanding of native resources and trends in their production by 2012; and
- All key performance indicators to be measured in an industry survey in 2012.4
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1.11 |
The fourth objective, pollination research, with 10% of allocated funding, targets the following outcomes: - To better understand the cost and value of pollination services provided by beekeepers; and
- To generate industry value through shared learning with crop producers, especially the Australian almond industry.
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1.12 |
Strategies to achieve these objectives include:
- Assess the value to crop producers of pollination services on an individual crop basis to assist beekeepers with the pricing of their services;
- Research and communicate the cost of pollination service provision to beekeepers to assist them with the pricing of pollination services (costs to include beekeeper investment in hive preparation);
- Extend the Tasmanian Crop Pollination Association Code of Practice to all states; and
- Investigate the feasibility of investment in joint R&D projects with the Australian almond industry.
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1.13 |
Performance indicators for these measures include:
- Information guides available on cost of pollination service provision and value generated for each of the most important horticultural/agricultural crops by 2012;
- Six state based codes of practice for pollination to be published by 2012. Codes to be published at the rate of one per annum; and
- One joint R&D project with the Australian almond industry by 2010.5
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1.14 |
The fifth objective, with 10% of the allocated funding, is income diversification and new product development. The proposed outcomes within this objective are:
- To provide a major boost to packaged bee sales, an area of strong competitive advantage for the Australian industry; and
- To develop new Australian apiary products such as medicinal honey, organic wax for the cosmetics industry, royal jelly, bee venom, pollen and propolis sales, secondary priorities for niche products.
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1.15 |
Strategies to achieve these objectives include:
- Support R&D to facilitate the growth of Australian packaged bee sales; and
- Support R&D to facilitate the development of at least one new Australian apiary product.
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1.16 |
Performance indicators for these measures include:
- 20% growth in packaged bee sales from 2010 to 2012; and
- A single viable enterprise producing commercial quantities of a new Australian apiary product—with the support of the Honeybee R&D program—to be in place by 2012.6
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1.17 |
The sixth objective, extension, communication and capacity building, with 10% of allocated funding, targets the following outcomes:
- To improve industry performance through the adoption of relevant R&D project outcomes and beekeeper participation in vocational training;
- To educate the public and policy makers on the economic contribution made by the honeybee industry; and
- To build capacity in the Australian honeybee industry by encouraging the next generation of industry leaders and researchers.
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1.18 |
Strategies to achieve these objectives include:
- Ensure honeybee R&D outputs are in a form that is suitable for beekeeper use;
- Increase uptake of R&D outcomes through delivery via appropriate well funded channels;
- Support initiatives to increase beekeeper participation in vocational training, especially business management training;
- Preparation and distribution of easily digested compendiums of up-to-date and relevant research;
- Engage with policy makers and public opinion leaders to explain the economic contribution beekeeping makes through pollination and the importance of ongoing access to public forests;
- Educate the public and policy makers on the need to avoid pest/disease incursions;
- Educate crop producers on the economic contribution made by pollination services; and
- Develop scholarship opportunities and or travel grants for young industry leaders and researchers to ensure the next generation of talent is available to the industry.
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1.19 |
Performance indicators for these measures include:
- Participation by 20% of the industry in targeted vocational training by 2010;
- A compendium of international research prepared and distributed by 2008;
- A greater understanding of apiary issues by policy makers/opinion leaders/crop producers—to be established by survey in 2012; and
- One new annual industry scholarship/travel grant in place by 2009.7
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1 |
RIRDC, Honeybee R&D Five Year Plan 2007–2012, RIRDC Publication no. 07/056, April 2007, p. 21. Back |
2 |
RIRDC, Honeybee R&D Five Year Plan 2007–2012, RIRDC Publication no. 07/056, April 2007, p. 23. Back |
3 |
RIRDC, Honeybee R&D Five Year Plan 2007–2012, RIRDC Publication no. 07/056, April 2007, p. 24. Back |
4 |
RIRDC, Honeybee R&D Five Year Plan 2007–2012, RIRDC Publication no. 07/056, April 2007, p. 25. Back |
5 |
RIRDC, Honeybee R&D Five Year Plan 2007–2012, RIRDC Publication no. 07/056, April 2007, p. 26. Back |
6 |
RIRDC, Honeybee R&D Five Year Plan 2007–2012, RIRDC Publication no. 07/056, April 2007, p. 27. Back |
7 |
RIRDC, Honeybee R&D Five Year Plan 2007–2012, RIRDC Publication no. 07/056, April 2007, p. 287. Back |