DAY: Wednesday, January 8, 2025
TIME: 7:00 pm - Socializing begins at 6:30 pm
TYPE: Zoom
LEARN - The Forgotten Sex: The Importance of Drones for Colony Health
WHO: Dr. Garett Slater, Assistant Professor and Apiculture Extension Entomologist at Texas A&M AgriLife Research and Extension in Overton, TX.
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SCHEDULE
6:30.pm.ET | Virtual Socializing | |
7:00.pm ET | Club Announcements | |
7:30 pm ET | Presentation by Dr. Garett Slater, "The Forgotten Sex: The Importance of Drones for Colony Health" |
EVENT DESCRIPTION
Dr. Garett Slater will present his research on The Forgotten Sex: The Importance of Drones for Colony Health. Among the largest threats to colony health is queen failure. Shockingly, as many as 50% of commercial queens fail within 6 months. Beekeeper production relies on high quality queens, so queen failure is of deep importance to beekeepers and researchers alike. While much energy has focused on queen aspects of failure, we are increasingly discovering that drones play a more important role in queen quality than originally expected. Of drones which are sexually mature, as few as one in ten may be able to produce enough sperm to successfully inseminate a queen. If drones are not producing healthy sperm, their mates will not produce healthy colonies. Despite this, we have very little understanding of precisely why drone reproductive quality is low. In this talk, Garett will discuss drone biology, causes of poor drones, and what beekeepers can do to mitigate poor drone quality.
SPEAKER BIO
Dr. Garett Slater, PhD, is an Assistant Professor and Apiculture Extension Entomologist at Texas A&M AgriLife Research and Extension in Overton, TX. He has 18 years of beekeeping experience. He obtained a BS and MS in Biology from North Dakota State University in 2014 with a thesis focused on nutrition and queen quality. He then worked as a scientist and technician with the Bee Informed Partnership at the University of Minnesota for two years, directly supporting 30 commercial beekeepers in North Dakota and Texas. In 2022, he obtained his PhD from Purdue University with a thesis focused on applying modern genetic tools to honey bee breeding. He was then a USDA-ARS Postdoctoral Fellow from 2022- 2024 at the Honey Bee Breeding, Genetics, and Physiology Lab at Baton Rouge, LA. In 2024, he became an Assistant Professor at Texas A&M University as the state’s Apiculture Extension Specialist. Garett’s current research focuses on developing cheap genomic tools to help beekeepers select bees for natural defenses towards Varroa, pathogens, and other diseases. Additionally, Garett provides extension support to beekeepers across the state.
Garret also has a long history of communication and involvement with beekeepers via webinars and presentations, specialized courses, and articles. The topics of these communications range broadly, including fundamental scientific concepts (e.g., genetics, breeding, reproductive biology) and practical areas of interest (e.g., integrated pest management, queen production, disease management).