Varroa mite

Alert: Report varroa mites

If you suspect varroa mite, contact the Exotic Plant Pest Hotline immediately.

Freecall 1800 084 881 PIRSA.beebiosecurity@sa.gov.au

Varroa mite (V. destructor) is the most serious pest affecting honey bees worldwide. It remains a key threat to Australia’s honey and honey bee pollination plant industries.

Outbreak in Australia

Varroa mite was detected in June 2022 and an emergency response was initiated, supported by the Australian Government, state and territory governments, and pollination-dependent agricultural industries.

Initial eradication efforts were led by the NSW Department of Primary Industries, being the state most affected by the pest. It was the largest agricultural biosecurity response in Australia to date, but it was ultimately unsuccessful. In September 2023, the National Management Group agreed it was not feasible to eradicate varroa mite.

A 24-month Transition to Management (T2M) plan was approved in February 2024 to assist industry bodies and the community – read the National Varroa Mite Response Plan T2M (PDF 564.2 KB).

South Australia currently remains free of varroa mite.

National management program

The National Varroa Mite Management Program (NVMMP) minimises the effects of varroa mite naturalisation and slows the spread. It focuses on:

  1. Maintaining business continuity for pollination-dependent industries.
  2. Training beekeepers to manage varroa mite and keep hives healthy – register for free workshops.
  3. Advising about monitoring and reporting requirements.
  4. Providing a reliable webinar series relevant to best practices in an Australian context.

Biosecurity assistance will be available through updates to the Australian Honey Bee Industry Biosecurity Code of Practice and the Bee Biosecurity Manual. This will help beekeepers with pest and disease prevention and control.

Varroa Development Officers will engage with beekeepers to resolve problems and coordinate a voluntary hive monitoring program. Industry concerns, knowledge gaps, and future needs will also be addressed.

Interstate diagnostic laboratories will detect varroa mite and associated exotic viruses quickly, initiating efficient responses. Research into improved bee genetics and breeding behaviour traits to help manage varroa mite is also being examined in Australia and internationally.

Advisory committee

The South Australian Varroa Industry Advisory Committee (SAVIAC) was established to manage varroa mite, in support of the bee industry. It includes expert representatives from:

PIRSA works closely with this committee in developing plans and policies.

Industry updates and information

T2M webinars

Education resources

Support services

If you have been impacted by varroa mite, contact your local Family and Business Mentor for support.

This free, confidential triage service connects you to independent providers across SA. They will listen to your needs, provide counselling, and help to manage your situation.

Response in SA

PIRSA is using border control measures to help prevent varroa mites entering the state. This relies on beekeepers monitoring their hives, maintaining records, and submitting sampling results – see the varroa surveillance map.

We are working with industry groups to promote awareness of risks and preventative measures, making sure SA is prepared for the expected arrival of varroa mites.

PIRSA is committed to providing education, training, and awareness packages free to all beekeepers as they are developed, as well as more regional information sessions.

SA Detection Response and Management Plan
SA Detection Response and Management Plan

The plan helps apiary and pollination industries prevent varroa from entering SA and minimise the impact once detected. It offers a risk-based approach to business continuity.

Download PDF

Varroa Development Officers (VDO)

PIRSA has appointed a team to help commercial and hobbyist beekeepers develop the skills to manage varroa mite. They will work with the beekeeping industry, offering advice on preparation strategies, varroa monitoring, education, hive management, and biosecurity measures.

These services are free and available to all registered apiarists across the state. Support will be delivered by:

  • phone or email
  • face-to-face meetings
  • attendance at small group and association meetings
  • short information sessions or larger group workshops.

Contact the VDO team for more information or to arrange a group session.

Actions following potential detections

If varroa mites are confirmed in SA, we will notify registered beekeepers, including the approximate locality. Updates will be sent via this webpage, the biosecurity notice bulletin emails and SMS, and social media posts.

PIRSA will assist with distributing acaricides and surveillance materials when detections occur. In the longer term, individual beekeepers will be responsible for managing varroa mites.

The South Australian Government will not conduct enforced euthanasia of hives. Varroa mites will remain a notifiable pest and affected hives must be managed at the discretion of the individual beekeeper.

Chemical treatments – only applicable if approved in SA

Several products, including acaricides, have emergency permits for surveillance use and will be made available if an outbreak occurs. PIRSA will approach beekeeping suppliers to gauge their interest in being an approved supplier on these permits and product labels.

Acaricides are not yet permitted in South Australia as there have been no varroa detections. This is one of the last measures that should be used.

If applying acaricides as part of your management program:

  1. Always follow the label directions of the product, including the potential withholding period before extraction, or residue testing.
  2. Monitor for economic threshold levels of mites prior to application.
  3. Monitor post application to assess effectiveness of the management tool.

The annual cost of acaricide treatments could be around $50 to $60 per hive, based on 4 treatments per year.

See AHBIC's varroa chemical treatment information.

Beekeeper responsibilities

New and ongoing beekeepers must register their hive details to protect the industry from possible outbreaks of varroa mite.

Beekeepers should continue sampling a representative number of hives and send suspicious samples to PIRSA for analysis.

As a beekeeper or almond pollinator, you need to monitor and control the health of your hives.

Learn your requirements and restrictions for moving bees, hives, apiary products, and beekeeping property.

If you find signs of varroa mites or non-compliance with the above requirements, immediately notify the Exotic Plant Pest Hotline.

Identification and impact

Varroa mites are tiny reddish-brown external parasites of honey bees. Individual mites can be easily seen on brood, but they are difficult to identify on adult bees.

Varroa mites partially hidden under honey bee abdominal segments (photo credit Dr M. Goodwin)

Varroa mites partially hidden under honey bee abdominal segments – photo: Dr M. Goodwin

If left untreated, varroa mites will kill any beehive or colony they infect.

Varroa mites are agile, they move into hives quickly and transfer through contact between bees. Adult bees can carry this pest between hives and even between apiaries when drifting, swarming and absconding.

Mites can also spread via the beekeeper and equipment shared between hives and apiaries.

Learn more in the notifiable honey bee pests and diseases factsheet (PDF 1.1 MB).

Contact

PIRSA Apiary Unit
Email: pirsa.beebiosecurity@sa.gov.au
Phone: 8207 7900

Apiary registration: 1800 654 688

Report a suspected exotic apiary pest: 1800 084 881

SA Varroa Industry Advisory Committee
Email: pirsa.saviac@sa.gov.au

Varroa Development Officers

Rahul Shankar – VDO Coordinator
Email: rahul.shankar@sa.gov.au

Josh D’Ambrosio 
Phone: 0477 960 435
Email: joshua.d’ambrosio@sa.gov.au

Davide Stella 
Phone: 0408 244 091
Email: davide.stella@sa.gov.au

Aaron Woolston 
Email: aaron.woolston@sa.gov.au