Development and assessment of an epidemiologic dashboard for surveillance of Varroa destructor in Ontario apiaries.

Prev Vet Med

Department of Population Medicine, University of Guelph, Guelph, Canada; Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs, Guelph, Canada.

Published: March 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Varroosis, caused by the Varroa destructor mite, poses a major threat to honey bee health in North America; eradication is not possible, so efforts focus on controlling mite levels.
  • Monitoring Varroa mite populations is crucial for effective management, but traditional surveillance methods can be challenging and costly.
  • The project introduces an interactive data dashboard that visualizes mite infestation data in Ontario, developed during the COVID-19 pandemic, which enhances bee community monitoring and proposes a comprehensive approach for future surveillance efforts.

Article Abstract

Varroosis (caused by the Varroa destructor mite) is a key health issue for honey bees in North America. Because these mites can exist in reservoirs of feral honey bee colonies, eradication is impossible, and instead efforts are made to maintain mites below a critical threshold. Monitoring for Varroa mites within a population is key for allocating resources and targeting interventions but surveillance can be difficult and/or expensive. This project aims to reflect on the success of data dashboards developed throughout the 2019-coronavirus pandemic and showcase how these methods can improve surveillance of Varroa mite infestations in Ontario, Canada. Dashboards provide a consistent source of information and epidemiologic metrics through data visualizations, and mobilize data otherwise bound to tables and intermittent reports. In the present work, an interactive dashboard for the surveillance of Varroa mite infestations across the province is proposed. This dashboard was developed using routine ministry inspection data to depict the spatio-temporal distribution of mites across a five-year data collection period. Through interactive figures and plots, able to be disaggregated to a specific region and time frame, this dashboard will allow for members of the beekeeping community to monitor provincial mite levels throughout the season. Seven criteria found to be common across highly actionable COVID-19 dashboards were used in a beta testing stage of development to assess the quality of the dashboard, and critically reflect on its strengths and weaknesses. Furthermore, future directions for surveillance dashboards are explored, including integration with citizen science data collection to develop a comprehensive province-wide surveillance system. The outcome of this project is a functional dashboard proof-of-concept for population-level monitoring of Varroa mites and a model for future tools designed for other species and diseases.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.prevetmed.2023.105853DOI Listing

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