A year since the varroa mite entered Qld, honey bee colonies have collapsed

In March 2025, Varroa destructor first appeared in Queensland beehives.

It is believed the parasitic mite, deadly to European honey bees, was carried over the Scenic Rim from New South Wales, which has been battling varroa since 2022.

Just a year on, it is estimated 90 per cent of south-east Queensland’s wild honey bee colonies have collapsed, and almost all managed colonies are in a battle for survival.

Rick McFarlane says it has been heartbreaking to watch the impact of varroa mite on his bees.(ABC News: Will Murray)

“For south-east Queensland, the only word I can use now is devastation,” Rick McFarlane, a commercial apiarist known as The Backyard Beekeeper, said.

Varroa mites enter a colony through foundress mites; adult females carried on the back of infected bees, and lay eggs in the hive’s brood cells.

The mites feed on the larvae inside, which then emerge as severely impaired bees.

Foundress mites lay their eggs inside the hive’s brood cells.(ABC News: Will Murray)

“So, our bees might be healthy and flying around today, but the next generation, if affected by varroa, can’t fly,” Mr McFarlane said.

“The colony can no longer function, and it collapses.”

To detect varroa, Mr McFarlane demonstrated how beekeepers pour hundreds of bees into a container filled with alcohol, strain the dead bees out, and count how many mites have fallen off.

A bee with a mite attached. Bees born from infested brood cells are weakened and often can not fly.(ABC News: Will Murray)

“We’re hoping for less than three,” Mr McFarlane explained.

But as he peered inside a plastic jar, he frowned: “Sixteen varroa mites in that sample.”

Until recently, the most effective method for killing varroa was a synthetic miticide.

Oxalic acid in the form of strips is placed inside a beehive to kill varroa.(ABC News: Will Murray)

However, a new mite has emerged which is resistant to it.

Other treatments involve using oxalic acid in the form of strips and vapour.

Oxalic acid is a naturally occurring chemical which is non-toxic to bees, but harmful to both mites and humans.

Rick McFarlane treats his hives with oxalic acid vapour.(ABC News: Will Murray)

Rick McFarlane, The Backyard Beekeeper, treats his hives with oxalic acid vapour. (ABC News: Will Murray)

An oxalic acid vaporiser.(ABC News: Will Murray)

An oxalic acid vaporiser. (ABC News: Will Murray)

Oxalic acid is harmful to humans.(ABC News: Will Murray)

Oxalic acid is harmful to humans. (ABC News: Will Murray)

To do a mite count, hundreds of bees have to be put into a container of alcohol.(ABC News: Will Murray)

To do a mite count, hundreds of bees have to be put into a container of alcohol. (ABC News: Will Murray)

After performing an ‘alcohol wash’, beekeepers count how many mites fall off their bees.(ABC News: Will Murray)

After performing an alcohol wash, beekeepers count how many mites fall off their bees. (ABC News: Will Murray)

Regular oxalic acid use can keep numbers low enough for the colony to survive, but will not eliminate the mites altogether.

It is hard work, and emotionally and financially draining.

“I’ve only got 150 hives, and it’s $1,500 to $3,000 extra per month that I’ve got to cover,” Mr McFarlane said.

“It’s our livelihood, but more than that we love our bees. So, when you start to see colonies collapsing, it’s heartbreaking.”

Colonies can appear healthy on the outside, then collapse suddenly.(ABC News: Will Murray)

Barely hanging on

Amber Stone, who has poured her life savings into her north Brisbane beekeeping business, Teralba Bees, has had a significant part of her operation taken away.

“We would have families come to the apiary, we would put on beekeeper suits and go down into the beehives,” she said.

“But we don’t know if we’re going to open a beehive and they’re going to be dead.”

Amber Stone runs Teralba Bees in Brisbane’s northern suburbs.(ABC News: Will Murray)

Australia is one of the last places to be affected by varroa, and Ms Stone said the emergence of new treatments and genetically resistant bees elsewhere was giving the local industry hope.

But it is a desperate and frustrating struggle to hang on.

“The joy has been taken out of beekeeping,” Ms Stone said as she removed formerly infested beehive frames from a box and prepared to burn them.

Amber Stone burns her beehive frames which have been damaged by a combination of varroa mites and small hive beetle.(ABC News: Will Murray)

“Treatments are changing all the time, and (new treatments) aren’t approved as quickly as you’d like them to be.

“So, it’s like, are we doing this, are we not doing this? We either throw everything we can at this, or we watch our bees die.”

Amber Stone has stopped taking her beehives to schools for fear the bees inside could be dead.(ABC News: Will Murray)

A threat to food security

Western European honey bees have been in Australia for 200 years and are responsible for most of the pollination necessary to grow food crops.

Macadamias, mangoes and avocadoes are some of the Queensland products most reliant on them.

If managed colonies collapse, and there are almost no wild bees left, harvest failures are a real possibility.

“We think there will be the potential for pollination shortfalls,” Rob Stephens from the Queensland Department of Primary Industries said.

Rob Stephens says there is a potential for pollination shortfalls.(ABC News: Chloe Chomicki)

“There will be industries that don’t quite understand their reliance on bees for pollination services because they’ve been over-reliant on wild honey bees.”

He said some would need to pay for commercial beekeepers to come in for the first time.

“There is that possibility that there’s a direct threat to food security,” Mr Stephens said.

“If you add (pollination) as another fixed price, that could push some growers over the limit.”

Key Queensland crops are reliant on honey bees for pollination.(ABC News: Will Murray)

New varroa treatments are available overseas, and the Australian government is working on approving them for use here.

But Mr Stephens warned against assuming that approval was imminent.

“There is always a collapse when varroa comes into a new place like Australia, but industry will recover,” he said.

“Everywhere in the world they have gotten over this hump, and we expect to as well, but there are going to be some tough times in the immediate future.”

Posted 

Thu 4 Jun 2026 at 5:35am

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