1 / 36

Honey Bee Biology The Basis for Colony Management

Honey Bee Biology The Basis for Colony Management. Rick Fell Department of Entomology Virginia Tech. Basic Biology of the Honey Bee Colony. Understanding honey bee biology is an important part of beekeeping - it provides the foundation for colony management.

saburo
Download Presentation

Honey Bee Biology The Basis for Colony Management

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Honey Bee BiologyThe Basis for Colony Management Rick Fell Department of Entomology Virginia Tech

  2. Basic Biology of the Honey Bee Colony Understanding honey bee biology is an important part of beekeeping - it provides the foundation for colony management. The more one understands about bee behavior and colony organization, the easier are bees to manage.

  3. Occupants of the Honey Bee Hive Queen: Normal Colony: 1 Queen 200 - 80,000 Workers 0 - 5000 Drones Worker: Three types of individuals: Drone:

  4. Workers • Form bulk of the population • Functionally sterile females • Perform all duties and labor for maintenance of the colony • Develop from a fertilized egg laid by the queen

  5. Egg Fertilized Unfertilized Worker Drone Queen Honey Bee Sex Determination System Females Males

  6. Life Stages of a Worker Honey Bee Older larvae with cells being capped Egg and first stage larva Larvae of different ages. The white material in the bottom of the cell is food secreted by adult workers. Worker pupae - changing to the adult. An emerging adult worker

  7. Development Times of Honey Bee Castes from Egg to Adult Worker 21 days Queen 16 days Drone 24 days

  8. Labor Activities of Workers perform all duties and labor for maintenance of the colony, including: - feeding, care of the young (nurse activities) - comb building and nest construction - protection of the colony - maintenance of hive, internal environment - collection and storage of food

  9. Labor Activities of Workers Brood care: workers provide all of the care and feeding of the larvae. Workers seal the cell with a wax cap before the larva pupates. Nest construction: workers build the comb which forms the internal structure of the hive. The comb is made from beeswax, a natural wax secreted from glands on the abdomen of workers.

  10. Workers are responsible for Environmental control. They will fan at the entrance to circulate fresh air into the hive if carbon dioxide levels get too high or if temperatures rise above acceptable levels. Fanning workers Labor Activities of Workers Maintenance of the nest: Bees are careful about nest hygiene; clean cells before reuse, and remove debris and dead bees.

  11. Labor Activities of Workers Guard Activities: workers serve as guards at the hive entrance to protect the nest from intruders. Guard bees will attack and sting. Honey bee sting

  12. Labor Activities of Workers Guard Activities: workers serve as guards at the hive entrance to protect the nest from intruders. Guard bees will attack and sting. Collection, Handling and Storage of Food: Bees collect nectar and pollen from flowers as food. Nectar is carried internally in the honey stomach. Pollen is picked up by the special body hairs as a bee visits a flower.

  13. Honey bees are efficient foragers and have a dance language system to recruit other bees to profitable food sources. • The dance language allows bees to provide information on the direction and distance of food sources to other hive members. • The dances are preformed on the comb in the hive. Honey Bees as Foragers and Pollinators

  14. Labor Activities of Workers Nectar is converted into honey by workers in the hive. When the honey is ripe and the cells have been filled, the workers cap the cells with a wax capping. Pollen is carried on the hind legs of the worker when foraging. Pollen is stored in cells and serves as the source of proteins, fats and minerals.

  15. Labor Activities of Workers - How does a Bee know what to do? • Social organization and the division of labor: • The system is based on age and physiological development; each worker performs in succession the various labor tasks required for the colony to function. • A worker acts as her own informant, patrolling the hive and responding to labor needs if she is able. Cleaning Brood care Comb building Guarding Foraging

  16. Queen • Queen is the most important individual in the colony • Responsible for normal functioning of hive • Quality of the queen which determines the value of a hive

  17. Queen Development • Develops from a fertilized egg or young female larva • Queens are reared in special cells - hang vertically and extended as larva grows • Queen larvae are fed a diet of “Royal Jelly” • Cell capped on day 5, larva spins cocoon

  18. Queen Development • Completes development and emerges after about 15 1/2 to 16 days after the egg was laid. • Seeks out rivals and attacks cells or two queens may fight. • Initiates mating flights at 5-6 days of age

  19. Natural Queen Rearing in the Honey Bee Colony Swarming Emergency Supersedure

  20. Mating Flight of the Queen Drones pursuing a caged queen in a drone congregation area. Queens mate with 10-20 males.

  21. Queen Honey Bee Reproductive Organs

  22. Honey Bee Queen Spermatheca and Valve Fold

  23. Biological Role of the Queen • Reproduction - egg laying • Production of pheromones Pheromones are chemical substances (or blends of substances) secreted by an animal to the outside that affect the behavior or physiology of other animals of the same species.

  24. Biological Role of the Queen • Reproduction - egg laying • Production of pheromones • maintain social order and allow workers to determine queen presence • prevent worker ovary development • prevent queen rearing

  25. Drones • Males: larger than workers, large eyes, no sting • Hatch from unfertilized eggs, reared in larger cells, longer development time (24 days) • Only function - reproductive • Reach sexual maturity at about 12 days of age and initiate mating flights

  26. Mating of the Honey Bee Virgin queens leave the hive to mate, seeking males at dronecongregationareas. Mating occurs in flight. Drone congregation areas remain stable over a period of years.

  27. Drone Biology • Drones not reared all year - only spring and summer • Number of drones dependent on colony strength and condition • Drones “kicked-out” in fall - “Fall Drone Massacre”

  28. Natural Nest of the Honey Bee A natural nest of honey bees. The natural nest provides the basis for modern beekeeping • The nest is generally constructed inside of a cavity • Serves as a place for rearing young and storing food. • Provides protection from pests, predators, and the environment. • Nest serves a social integrating function • Honey bees choose nest sites carefully, for colony success is often dependent on good site selection.

  29. Interior of the Honey Bee Nest Interior portion of the nest is composed of a series of parallel combs made of beeswax

  30. Comb Construction Comb is made of hexagonal cells - optimal arrangement cells offset on different sides angle 9-14o, usually 13o

  31. Controlling Cell Wall Thickness 1 3 4 2 cell thickness 0.073 mm + 0.002 mm Checking wall thickness by elastic resilience

  32. Nest Construction - Comb Building Peripheral galleries Comb attachment

  33. Cell Numbers in a Natural Nest A honey bee colony, composed of 30,000 or more workers, can be expected to have a nest with a comb area of approximately 2.5 square meters, consisting of 100,000 cells. The majority of cells are worker cells (~ 83%), and the remaining cells are drone (~ 17%). Worker cells average 5.2 mm (5-6 mm) in diameter, drone cells 6.2 mm (6-7 mm).

  34. Honey storage Peripheral galleries Diagram of a Natural Honey Bee Nest Pollen storage Propolis envelope Brood Nest Drone comb Entrance Queen cells (After Seeley & Morse 1976)

  35. Nest Structure and Beekeeping • Understanding nest structure is important because we utilize the natural nest organization in our beekeeping practices. • The standard hive is managed so that the brood nest is in the bottom of the hive and honey is stored in the upper hive bodies. • The use of several hive bodies and removable frames allows the hive to be inspected and honey to be harvested from the top of the hive. Honey Brood nest

More Related