beginning beekeeping day 2 sponsored by the colonial beekeepers association

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BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the Colonial Beekeepers Association

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BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the Colonial Beekeepers Association. Honey Bee Biology and Colony Organization. Apis mellifera The scientific name for the western honey bee.  - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

BEGINNING BEEKEEPING

DAY 2Sponsored by the

Colonial Beekeepers Association

Page 2: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

Honey Bee Biologyand

Colony Organization

Page 3: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

– Apis mellifera• The scientific name for the

western honey bee.  • You will see the word honey bee

spelled as two words and as a single word.  But it is correct to spell it as two words like House fly, and bumble bee. 

Page 4: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

Basic Honey Bee Biology

Page 5: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

Colony Organization

Honey Bees are Highly Socialized Insects

Under natural conditions they nest in cavities and build multiple combs.

Page 6: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

The Players(castes)

Queen - female

Drones - maleWorkers - female

Page 7: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

The inhabitants of the hive

Page 8: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

The Queen Profile

The queen is a mature, fertile female. 

She lays thousands of eggs during her life time. 

A queen has the longest live span in the colony living for years versus months. 

She is normally larger than the other bees in the hive and has a slim torpedo shape. 

She does have a stinger, but uses it to kill other queens.

Under normal conditions a hive will have only one queen.

Page 9: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

• She develops from a fertilized egg.

• She mates with many drones to produce fertilized eggs.

• She is the mother of all the bees in the hive.

• Her role in the hive is to produce eggs and to release pheromone signals within the hive.

Some Facts About the Queen Bee

Page 10: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

Worker Profile

• Female but typically not able to reproduce

• A colony will have 20,000 - 60,000

• Live for 4-6 weeks in summer, 4-5 months in winter

M. Frazier

Page 11: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

Some Facts About Worker Bees

• Develops from a fertilized egg

• A worker bee spends its first 20 days in the hive performing various task – cleaning cells, feeding young larva, building wax comb, etc.

• She defends the hive. She has a stinger, but can sting only once. She dies soon after stinging.

• The worker bee also has pollen baskets on her rear legs to gather and collect pollen while she is foraging for nectar outside the hive.

• Wax comes from 4 pairs of wax glands under the abdomen.

Page 12: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

Meet the Drone beeDrones are the males in the colony.  

Note the general shape of the drone.

Notice two things:

1) The head is large and the eyes predominate the head.

2) The rear-end of the drone is rounded --they have no stinger and can not sting.   Although they are usually considered worthless, they  contribute to the continuation of  one generation to the next generation.

Page 13: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

Some Facts About the Drone Bee

• The drone is the male bee in the hive.

• He develops from an unfertilized egg. Meaning he is passing on genetic material from his mother only.

• He provides ½ of the genetic material in worker bees.

• His life span depends on the health of the colony. During poor honey flows and honey shortages, drones may be driven from the hive. This happens at the onset of winter as well.

• Drones can be created by laying worker honey bees.

Page 14: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

Division of Labor

Among Females - Reproduction

Among Workers – All the work of the hive except laying eggs

• Based on two things:

– The age of the bee

– The needs of the

colony

• It’s highly elastic

Page 15: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

Nurse bees

– 1 - 12 days

– Self-grooming

– Cell cleaning

– Feeding brood

Page 16: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

– 10-20 days old– Comb building– Hive cleaning– Accepting nectar

and pollen from foragers

– Undertakers – Hive guarding– Climate control

M. Frazier

House Bees

Page 17: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

– From about 20 days until death (30-45 days)

– Collect• Nectar• Pollen• Water• Plant resins M. Frazier

Field Bees

Page 18: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

Biological Information

• All honey bees come from eggs.

• All honey bees develop into larva.

• All honey bees go thru something called Metamorphosis.

• The development times for all honey bees differ by caste.

Lets look at each of these.

Page 19: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

DevelopmentComplete

Metamorphosis

Egg

Larva

Pupa

Adult

Dadant and Sons

Page 20: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

Beekeeping Math

The development times for all honey bees differ by Cast and Gender

Egg Larva Pupa Total

3 5.5 7.5 16

3 6 12 21

3 6.5 14.5 24

Queen

Worker

Drone

Page 21: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

Development

M. Frazier

Page 22: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

All honey bees come from eggs

• A queen honey bee can lay over 2000 eggs in a single 24 hour period.

• If your math is good, multiply this by 10, 20, 30, and 40 days the general life span of worker bees.

• Eggs are deposited into cells.

Page 23: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

All honey bees develop into larva• Larva in cells look

somewhat like little worms. The body is composed of a head plus 13 ring-like divisions or segments.

• It grows to fill the cell very quickly. Between the day it emerges from the egg until it reaches the fifth day of development, it will grow six times it’s body weight during each 24 hour period of development.

• Healthy larva are white in color.

Page 24: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

Then a Pupa..

M. Frazier

Page 25: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

The cells of honey bees differ by caste

                                                                                           

Queen cells

Worker cell

Drone cells

Page 26: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

Beekeeping Math

The development times for all honey bees differ by Cast and Gender

Caste Hatch Cap Emerge

Queen 3½ days 8 days +-1 16 days +-1 Laying 28 days +-5

Worker 3½ days 9 days +-1 20 days +-1 Foraging 42 days +-7

Drone 3½ days 10 days +-1 24 days +-1 Flying to DCA 38 days +-5

Page 27: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

Fertilized Eggs Unfertilized Eggs

Female Male

Worker Queen

Page 28: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

Fertilized vs. UnfertilizedWorker cells vs. Drone Cells

Drone

Worker

M. Frazier

Page 29: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association
Page 30: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

Worker vs. QueenAll fertilized eggs have the potential to

become Queens

S. Camazine

Page 31: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

Eggs and Larva

Page 32: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

When is a new queen made?

Swarming – Normal hive reproduction.

Swarming should be avoided.

Supersedure – Replace an old or failing Queen

Emergency – When something happens to the Queen???

Page 33: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

In all cases these fertilized larvae are

• Housed in larger cells

• Fed large amounts of royal jelly throughout larval life

M. Frazier

Page 34: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

Queen CellsSupercedure cells are queen cells found along the center of a given frame.

Swarm cells are found clinging to the bottom of the brood frame and are used to rear a SECOND QUEEN

Page 35: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

In Swarming

The old queen participates in the requeening process

D. Sammataro

Page 36: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

In An Emergency Situation

The old queen doesNot participate in Re-queeing process

M. Frazier

Page 37: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

NEW Virgin Queen • Seeks out cells and

kills developing queens

• If others queens have emerged, queens fight to the death

• After a few days she makes her mating flight, mating with 7-14 drones

• Returns and after a few days begins to lay eggs

M. Frazier

Page 38: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

What happens if the returning queen doesn’t

make it Back?

Page 39: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

Introduce a NEW QueenGet a new queen

orMake a new queen

D. Sammataro

Page 40: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

If not, what happens...

S. Camazine

Page 41: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

A colony of drones

M. Frazier

Page 42: BEGINNING BEEKEEPING DAY 2 Sponsored by the  Colonial Beekeepers Association

Any Questions ???