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<blockquote data-quote="Mark Reynolds" data-source="post: 1807849" data-attributes="member: 43196"><p>Talking about honey bees and genetics. A couple weeks ago I was doing some checking on reed canary grass and varieties of RCG and ended up checking on honey bee varieties. I forget what led me there. Anyway, RCG can bee extremely invasive and undesirable or o very high quality forage that does not readily expand beyond the bounds of where its been planted......all the same species. In the process of checking on the honey bee, I found that the European honey bee that we all know and get our honey bee is the same species as the Africanized bee or "killer bee" that we all hear about (and some of us have probably had encounters with). Genetics is interesting and one tiny change can alter the entire species into something unrecognizable.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Mark Reynolds, post: 1807849, member: 43196"] Talking about honey bees and genetics. A couple weeks ago I was doing some checking on reed canary grass and varieties of RCG and ended up checking on honey bee varieties. I forget what led me there. Anyway, RCG can bee extremely invasive and undesirable or o very high quality forage that does not readily expand beyond the bounds of where its been planted......all the same species. In the process of checking on the honey bee, I found that the European honey bee that we all know and get our honey bee is the same species as the Africanized bee or "killer bee" that we all hear about (and some of us have probably had encounters with). Genetics is interesting and one tiny change can alter the entire species into something unrecognizable. [/QUOTE]
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