Beekeepers' preferences for honeybee breeding goals: a French case study
Kistler, T.; Basso, B.; Lauvie, A.; Phocas, F.
Show abstract
Honeybee breeding plans are relatively recent in most countries. In France, diverse small-scale breeding groups are emerging. Beekeepers are highly diverse in their motivations, farm productions and services, practices and management techniques. Yet, little is known about what beekeepers would consider as relevant breeding goals in the design of breeding plans. We therefore conducted an online survey answered by about 250 French beekeepers, mostly professionals, to assess their perceived importance of including 20 pre-defined traits in breeding goals and to identify how beekeeping profiles might influence these priorities. Respondents rated each trait as essential, useful, or useless, and indicated if they wished useful or essential traits to be genetically improved or merely maintained at their current level. Results indicated a strong preference for multi-trait selection, with a median of 13 traits considered useful or essential. Honey yield, disease resistance, swarming tendency, gentleness, and summer feed autonomy, emerged as the main traits of interest with about 90% of beekeepers finding them at least useful. About 40% or more only wished to maintain these traits at their current level rather than to directionally improve them. A major exception to this was disease resistance, that 75% wanted to improve. Bees genetic background influenced the most the importance attributed to breeding goal traits, while other beekeeping profile characteristics only had a marginal effect on breeding goal trait priorities. Some poorly studied traits, such as summer and winter feed autonomy, winter diapause, and longevity, were considered at least useful in a breeding goal by over 70% of beekeepers. Future research is needed to explore possible selection criteria for these traits and estimate the potential for their genetic improvement. ImplicationsOur survey shows that French beekeepers wish to improve or maintain through selective breeding usual colony production and behavioral traits, but also colony resilience, especially disease resistance and feed autonomy. However, trait priorities differ depending on the genetic background of the bees used. This knowledge is essential for designing breeding programs that truly match beekeeper needs and for identifying which traits deserve research attention. In France, beekeepers are increasingly starting breeding efforts to adapt their bees to current conditions, facing growing pressures from climate change, diseases, invasive species, and pesticides. Well-designed breeding programs can support sustainable beekeeping and essential pollination services.
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