Small Cell Woes

Mite tray debris seen when bees cleanse the broodnest core.
Note the immature male and female mites, and bee pupa parts.
Can you find a mite without bite damage?
Large or Small Comb?
Natural comb isn't composed of a single cell size. Bees construct and use a range of cell sizes for rearing workers, drones, queens and for food storage. Bees raised on a single cell size, whether large or small, draw out the a variety of cell sizes with the same cell size distribution. No cell size memory there.
Historical Cell Measurements
A.I. Root wrote about cell size. He details cell size before foundation was made. He also describes efforts to arrive at a workable foundation size and European efforts at bee enlargement. His son continued writing about these issues.

This bald headed brood is seen when bees are cleansing the broodnest
core of pests.
The range of worker cell sizes described by A.I. Root and used by foundation manufactures fall well within the natural range of worker cell size found in natural comb. Bees draw out the same range of cell sizes regardless whether they've been on natural comb, regressed, or raised on small or large cell comb. There's no artificially large foundation commercially available in the US.
Large or Small Bees?
A colony will raise different size worker bees at different seasons, even when they are restricted to a single cell sized comb. A natural hive isn't composed of one size bee or a single sub caste of workers. Virgin queens travel far from their hives. They mate in drone congregation areas with at least a dozen different drones. This insures genetic variability and sub caste diversity. Mongrel bees, on a natural comb, yield a worker population that is diverse in size and genetics.
That's the ultimate combination for survival. A hive needs small cell sized bees and comb to thrive, it also needs large cell sized bees and comb or there wouldn't be so much large cell sized worker comb built. And the queen wouldn't prefer to lay in it during the summer.
Regression Anyone?
No cell size memory. No artificially enlarged foundation in common use. No large or small cell bees. So, there's no need for regression.

Drone, large cell(5.4mm) and small cell(4.9mm) foundation.
Without regression, there's no need, or reason to kill one's bees to save them. Regression commonly kills at least 75% of the hives. This loss was seen as a necessary step in selecting small cell bees. It was thought that a better adapted 'small cell survivor' was obtained to replace the defective large cell bees. Yikes!
Without regression, there's no need for isolated mating zones or out of season mating.
And there's no need to search out a feral source for remanent small cell survivors.
What other small cell practices could be changed or dropped if bees don't need to be regressed? How would dropping or changing these practices make running small cell hives easier?
Small Cell Thoughts
Small cell beekeepers make a crucial mistake when the concept of a single, small cell size collides with the reality of drawing out enough small cell comb. They can't adjust the foundation size upward, to get good foundation acceptance, without losing the health benefits. So, bee genetics get blamed for the comb drawing failure. Hence the whole concept of artificially enlarged bees has emerged. Connected with this concept is just about every conceivable explanation for all beekeeping woes.
When the broodnest structure and seasonal broodnest dynamics are understood, most small cell beekeeping problems are easily explained. And a century of bee observations and research don't need to be thrown out. Appropriate management practices can be formulated that work with the bees, rather than against them.
Small cell comb is a good approximation to the core area of a natural broodnest. That's why it works so well concerning pest and disease control. But it's a poor approximation for the rest of the broodnest. And that's where all the comb drawing problems, poor mid-season queen performance, and regression problems come from. It's not easy working against the bees.
