Small Hive Beetle Management in Florida Flow Hives: A 2026 Complete Guide
Florida is the small hive beetle (SHB) capital of the US — Aethina tumida populations survive year-round with no winter die-off. Essential Flow Hive SHB management for Florida: oil-filled bottom board traps from day one, AJ's Beetle Eater or West Beetle Trap between brood frames, strong populous colony (the primary defence), closed rear panel at night, and Swiffer-pad traps for extra control. SHB pressure peaks June–October during Florida's rainy season. University of Florida IFAS research confirms colony strength is the single most effective SHB control — keep colonies well-populated year-round.
The best small hive beetle management for a Florida Flow Hive in 2026: oil-filled bottom board trap (West Beetle Trap or similar) + AJ's Beetle Eater between brood frames + strong colony population + rear panel closed at night. SHB cannot be eliminated in Florida — management is continuous. UF/IFAS research confirms strong colonies are the primary defence. Register hives with FDACS (fdacs.gov) for free apiary inspection support.
In This Article
- Why Florida Has the Most Severe Small Hive Beetle Pressure in the US
- Aethina tumida Lifecycle in Florida: Understanding the Enemy
- How the Flow Hive Design Affects Small Hive Beetle Management in Florida
- Best Small Hive Beetle Traps for Florida Flow Hives — Ranked and Reviewed
- FDACS-Registered Chemical Treatments for Small Hive Beetle in Florida
- University of Florida IFAS Research on Small Hive Beetle Control Strategies
- Frequently asked questions
Why Florida Has the Most Severe Small Hive Beetle Pressure in the US
What makes Florida the epicentre of small hive beetle problems in American beekeeping?
Florida was the first US state to report established small hive beetle populations — and remains the state with the highest year-round SHB pressure. Understanding why Florida is uniquely challenging for SHB management helps beekeepers implement the right prevention strategy from day one.
- No winter die-off. In northern US states, cold winters kill off adult SHB populations outside hives — providing seasonal relief. Florida's year-round warm temperatures (rarely below 50°F / 10°C) allow SHB populations to reproduce continuously without interruption, building to much higher population densities than in any other US state.
- Ideal pupation conditions. Aethina tumida larvae exit the hive and pupate in soil. Florida's warm, sandy, moist soil — particularly during rainy season (June–September) — is nearly ideal for SHB pupation and emergence. Northern states' cold, frozen soil kills overwintering pupae; Florida's soil does not.
- Year-round warm temperatures. SHB reproduction rate doubles with each 10°F increase in temperature up to their optimal range. Florida's summer temperatures accelerate beetle generation times to as short as 4–6 weeks — meaning population explosions can occur rapidly during summer.
- High humidity. Florida's humidity keeps larvae moist during their soil pupation phase — dry conditions kill pupating SHB larvae. Florida's consistently humid soil provides near-ideal larval survival conditions year-round.
Florida beekeepers must accept that Aethina tumida cannot be eradicated from the Florida beekeeping environment — the goal is management, not elimination. A well-managed Flow Hive with strong colony population, effective traps, and properly sealed entry points can maintain SHB at levels where colony damage does not occur. Setting the expectation of zero beetles is counterproductive — the standard of success is colony health and productivity, not beetle absence.
Aethina tumida Lifecycle in Florida: Understanding the Enemy
How does the small hive beetle lifecycle differ in Florida compared to other states?
Beetles enter the Flow Hive through any opening
Adult SHB enter hives through the bottom entrance, upper vents, or any gap in the hive body. In Florida, adult beetles are present year-round — peak entry attempts occur at dusk and dawn. The Flow Hive's rear access panel gap is a specific entry point requiring management (see section below).
Beetles mate and lay eggs in the brood nest
Female SHB lay clusters of eggs in crevices in the brood comb, in cracks in the hive body, and between frames. Bees attempt to confine beetles to corners — this is why SHB are often found clustered in the corners and rear of the brood box, near the Flow super entrance point.
Larvae feed on honey, pollen, and brood
SHB larvae are the destructive life stage. They tunnel through honeycomb, consuming honey and pollen and defecating in the honey — creating the fermented "slimy" honey characteristic of SHB infestation. Larval development takes 10–16 days in Florida's warm conditions — faster than in cooler states.
Mature larvae exit the hive and pupate in soil
Mature larvae exit through the hive entrance (or any opening) and burrow into soil within 90 cm of the hive to pupate. Florida's warm, moist sandy soil is ideal. Pupation takes 3–4 weeks in Florida's summer temperatures. Disrupting soil under the hive stand (turning it over monthly) kills pupating larvae — one of the most effective and overlooked SHB management practices.
New adults emerge and reinvade the Flow Hive
Adult beetles emerge from the soil and immediately seek beehives using scent. In Florida, complete generation time is 4–6 weeks in summer — meaning a new beetle generation emerges every month during peak Florida summer conditions. This is why continuous year-round trap deployment is essential for Florida Flow Hive beekeepers.
How the Flow Hive Design Affects Small Hive Beetle Management in Florida
Does the Flow Hive create unique SHB challenges compared to traditional Langstroth hives in Florida?
The Flow Hive compatible system has one specific design consideration for Florida SHB management — the rear access panel — but overall is no more SHB-susceptible than a traditional Langstroth hive when properly managed.
- Rear panel gap management. The Flow Hive's rear harvest door creates a potential beetle entry point if not fully closed. In Florida's warm nights when SHB are most active, close the rear panel completely and ensure it fits snugly. Apply a thin strip of weatherstripping foam tape to any gap between the rear panel and hive body — a 2mm gap is sufficient for beetle entry.
- Queen excluder as SHB barrier. The queen excluder between the brood box and Flow super acts as a partial SHB barrier — adult beetles cannot pass through a standard queen excluder (3.5mm spacing). This keeps beetles concentrated in the brood box where guard bees can manage them, protecting the Flow Frames from direct beetle access.
- Flow super beetle risk. If the colony is very strong and beetles are excluded from the super, the Flow super remains largely beetle-free. If the colony is weakened and beetles breach the excluder area, they can reach any honey remaining in the Flow Frames — remove the Flow super immediately if colony population drops below the ability to defend the super.
- Screened bottom board double function. The screened bottom board in SkogHive's Flow Hive compatible kits serves dual purpose in Florida — allowing Varroa mites to fall through AND allowing SHB larvae (which are smaller than adult beetles) to fall into bottom-mounted oil traps. This is one of the most effective passive SHB control methods for Florida Flow Hives.
Best Small Hive Beetle Traps for Florida Flow Hives — Ranked and Reviewed
Which SHB traps work best in Florida's year-round warm conditions?
West Beetle Trap (Bottom Board Oil Trap)
Best for Florida Flow HivesThe West Beetle Trap sits below the screened bottom board and catches beetles that fall through the screen. Fill with food-grade vegetable oil or mineral oil — beetles drown on contact. Works passively 24/7 without beekeeper intervention between refills. Requires cleaning and oil replacement every 4–6 weeks in Florida's heat (oil evaporates faster in Florida summers than northern states).
- Passive — no maintenance between refills
- Does not require opening the hive
- Catches both adult beetles and larvae
- Florida-specific: refill every 3–4 weeks in summer (faster evaporation)
- Cost: $10–$20 per trap
AJ's Beetle Eater (In-Hive Frame Trap)
Excellent Complementary TrapAJ's Beetle Eater sits between brood frames — bees chase beetles into the trap's slots where they fall into an oil reservoir and drown. Particularly effective for catching beetles that have entered the hive and are sheltering between frames. In Florida Flow Hives, position one trap near the rear of the brood box adjacent to the Flow super entrance — the area where beetles tend to concentrate.
- Catches beetles inside the hive that escape bottom traps
- Place 1–2 traps in brood box, positioned toward the rear
- Clean and refill every 2–3 weeks in Florida summer heat
- Cost: $8–$15 per trap
Swiffer Pad Trap (DIY — Florida Beekeeper Favourite)
High-Value DIY OptionA Swiffer sweeper pad placed on the bottom board (above or below the screen) catches beetles in its fibres — they get tangled and cannot escape. Florida beekeepers have widely adopted this DIY approach as a low-cost supplement to oil traps. Beetles are attracted to the dark space under the pad. Replace the pad every 2–3 weeks or when visibly laden with beetles. Very effective in Florida's high-beetle-pressure environment.
- Cost: $1–$2 per pad
- No oil required — easier to manage
- Check and replace every 2–3 weeks
- Use in combination with oil traps for best Florida results
CheckMite+ Strips (Chemical — Last Resort)
Chemical Option — Use with CautionCheckMite+ (coumaphos strips) is registered in Florida for SHB control and is placed on a cardboard piece on the bottom board, covered with a screen to prevent bee contact. Effective for severe infestations but carries residue risks in wax and honey — never use when honey supers (including Flow supers) are in place. Reserve for severe SHB infestations that physical traps cannot control.
- FDACS-registered for Florida SHB control
- Never use with Flow super in place
- Coumaphos residues accumulate in beeswax — use sparingly
- Last resort only — physical traps are preferred first-line management
A Florida Flow Hive bottom board setup for maximum SHB management — West Beetle Trap oil reservoir below the screened bottom board and Swiffer pad trap positioned in the hive rear. Both traps together provide significantly better beetle control than either alone in Florida's year-round high-pressure environment.
FDACS-Registered Chemical Treatments for Small Hive Beetle in Florida
What does the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services approve for SHB control?
| Treatment | Active Ingredient | Florida SHB Effectiveness | Flow Super Compatible? |
|---|---|---|---|
| CheckMite+ strips | Coumaphos | High — strong chemical control | No — remove Flow super |
| GardStar 40% EC (soil drench) | Permethrin | High — kills pupating larvae in soil | Applied to soil, not hive — no super restriction |
| West Beetle Trap (vegetable oil) | Physical — oil drowning | Moderate — continuous passive control | Yes — no chemical contact with hive |
| AJ's Beetle Eater (vegetable oil) | Physical — oil drowning | Moderate — excellent inside-hive control | Yes — no chemical contact with honey |
| Swiffer pad trap | Physical — mechanical entrapment | Moderate — excellent supplement to oil traps | Yes |
Monthly soil disruption under and around your Florida Flow Hive stand is one of the most effective and completely free SHB management practices. Turn over the top 4 inches of soil within 3 feet of the hive stand once per month during peak season (May–October). This exposes pupating SHB larvae to surface temperatures and bird predation — killing a significant proportion of the larvae before they emerge as adults and reinvade the hive. In sandy Florida soil, this takes under 5 minutes with a garden fork.
University of Florida IFAS Research on Small Hive Beetle Control Strategies
What does Florida's leading apiculture research institution recommend for SHB management?
UF/IFAS SHB management priorities for Florida beekeepers:
- Maintain colony strength above all else. Manage Varroa destructor aggressively — high mite loads weaken Florida colonies faster than in cooler states, rapidly reducing the colony's ability to defend against SHB invasion.
- Keep hive boxes tight. Manage the volume of the hive relative to the bee population. In Florida's summer, if a colony isn't large enough to cover all the frames in a Flow super, remove the super. Empty space is undefended space where SHB will congregate.
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