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Sunday May 23 12:02 PM ET Hunt Is On for Africanized Bees

Hunt Is On for Africanized Bees

By RON WORD Associated Press Writer

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) - Defensive, mean and unpredictable, the killers entered through the Port of Jacksonville, hiding among the crates and containers arriving daily from other countries.

Tomas Mozer's job was to track them down and wipe them out.

His quarry: Killer bees.

Mozer found two swarms of the Africanized bees last month in bait hives at Blount Island in Jacksonville, marking the first time they had been captured in Florida. The bees have been found 18 times on ships in Florida since 1983, but never in hives on land.

Mozer's mission is to make sure the bees don't take up residence in Florida, potentially destroying the state's beekeeping industry and possibly fatally stinging residents, tourists and animals.

Since the bees entered the United States earlier this decade, there have been six deaths, three in Texas and three in Arizona, according to the Carl Hayden Bee Research Center in Tucson, Ariz.

One of the hives Mozer found at Blount Island had about 10,000 bees. The other only had a few of the insects. The bees were destroyed by freezing.

DNA testing showed the bees were from the dangerous African strain that was imported into South America in an attempt to boost honey production.

``We don't think they are established,'' Mozer said.

The swarms were located in the section of the port where container ships arrive from Puerto Rico. State agriculture officials suspect that all of the 150,000 wild bee colonies in Puerto Rico are Africanized. In 1997, the bees attacked and killed a 2-year-old boy who was with his family as they picked avocados.

Mozer said he was amazed he wasn't stung when he captured the killer bees in Jacksonville. ``They could have gotten me if they had wanted to,'' he said.

The bees get their nickname from their aggressive behavior. The African honeybees attack in furious swarms with little provocation, pursue victims over much greater distances than the more common European bees and remain agitated for up to eight hours.

``When you anger European bees, you get five or six after you. With Africanized bees, you get several hundred after you,'' said Rodney Holloway, a bee expert with the Texas Agricultural Extension Service at Texas A&M University.

Mozer's find has added to his workload. Since his discovery, he has had to increase from 50 to 75 the number of bait hives he regularly monitors in six counties in northeast Florida.

On a recent sweltering afternoon, Mozer parked his aging white state Ford pickup beside the Coast Guard station in Mayport, about 14 miles east of Jacksonville.

He waded through waist-deep grass to a wood pulp trap placed in the fork of a small tree. The 5-gallon trap contained scents such as lemon and gardenias known to attract the bees.

The bearded Mozer, a self-taught commercial beekeeper for several years, eases up to the trap, carefully watching for bees buzzing in and out.

Opening the end of the trap, he quickly jumps back. Several field mice scurry away, but there are no bees. Mozer's caution comes from the reputation of the Africanized bees.

``They are unpredictable. They are defensive,'' Mozer said. ``People have lost their lives and livestock. They need to be respected. These guys will not go without a fight.''

The state has some 500 bait hives used to detect killer bees, primarily in port areas, along Interstate 10 and on the Florida-Alabama border.

Africanized bees trace their killer genes to Africa, where a swarm of a specific strain known for its aggressiveness was captured and brought to Brazil by a scientist in the 1950s for experiments to increase honey production. Once there, the African bees escaped and began moving north while mating with native strains of bees and retaining their aggressive behavior.

Texas has dealt with wild swarms of Africanized bees since 1990, but they have not spread eastward past Houston. They have also spread as far west as California.

``The concern about the Africanized bees has been more than the results from the Africanized bees,'' said Holloway. ``We really have not had much of a problem with the Africanized bees.''



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