Bee behavior
Honeybees
are creatures of instinct. Believe it or not, these can only be trained to
utilize man-made equipment if it satisfies an instinctive need. Understanding
how bees live and work in order to produce and store honey is what makes
beekeeping a fascinating and rewarding agricultural quest.
Division of labor
Honeybees are social insects and each member of the
hive has particular duties assigned according to sexual and physiological
diversity in the three types of members.
The
drone is male and exists for the sole purpose of meeting with a queen. Drones
meet with between seven and 21 drones during the first three days of their
lives. Following the rare opportunity of meeting with the Queen, drones lose
their reproductive organs inside the Queen and fall to their death. Drones do
not have stingers to protect the colony or a long enough proboscis (tongues) to
forage for resources.
The Queen
Queens
are only fertile in the first three days of their life at which time they exit
the hive to complete mating flights. After these initial days the Queen’s sole
occupation is laying up to 2000 eggs a day for up to seven years provided they
live that long.
The Worker
Worker bees are females born from a fertilized egg laid
by a queen. Workers incubate the eggs, keeping them nursed and protected. The
workers complete all other duties in the hive. During the busiest time of the
season, workers live only 5 to 6 weeks. For nearly the first three weeks of a
worker’s life, their main job is to care for the young as a nurse bee and keep
the hive clean. The subsequent days are spent secreting wax to build honeycomb,
foraging for nectar, pollen, water, and tree sap and finally protecting the
colony. Workers are not born with potent venom. Venom is most potent at the end
of their lives. When there is a shortage of workers for any given job in the
colony, workers are recruited from their current duty. Some researchers claim
that workers as little as eight days old are able to perform any of the
required colony duties.
AGE
|
Duties:
|
1-3
days
|
Bees
are fed by other bees. They clean the brood cells and wander on the brood to
help keep it warm.
|
3-6
days
|
Bees
feed pollen and honey to the older larva, which are not more than two days
under the age of ceiling for the pupa stage.
|
5-6
days
|
Brood
glands become functional and orientation flights are taken during the ladder
part of this period.
|
12-18
days
|
The
wax glands develop and primary jobs include building honeycomb, cleaning the
hive, and carrying out debris to include deceased bees and wax crumbs.
|
18-20
days
|
Worker
bees become guards and at about three weeks of age they are foraging field
bees.
|
Wax Secretion and Manipulation of Wax
Scales
Workers who are actively engaged in wax secretion
gorge on honey and hang very quietly in chains at or near their building site.
Their organs digest and secretion transforms their honey sack contents into
energy and beeswax. It takes about 24 hours for the honey to be processed and
the wax to be sculpted into honeycomb.
Wax is secreted by wax glands on the underside of the
abdomen. The plates covering the glands are called the “sterna” (singular:
“sternum”). The overlapping sterna 4, 5, 6, and 7 each have two smooth
glistening mirrors. The wax flows onto the mirrors in a liquid form and hardens
to create small flakes between the mirrors and the overlapping sterna parts.
Unless lost by accident, wax scales are always removed
from the worker “pockets” and manipulated by the same bee that secretes them.
Scales that are dropped can be recovered by other workers. Scales are forked
out of the worker’s pockets by spines or combs by one of the hind “tarsi”. When
the scale is being held, the bee uses its hind leg to flex the scale towards
the mouth, where it can be grasped by the forelegs or the mandibles. Bees do
not seem to follow any sequence when removing scales from the eight pockets.
Number of trips per day
The number of trips a foraging worker bee makes in a
day depends on how far their traveling. Researchers believe each bee makes 5 to
15 trips per day. Honeybees gathering pollen may make many more trips per day
if the pollen is available all day long. Water collectors make hundreds of
trips per day.
Foraging Area
The number of flowers would you be must visit to
obtain a load varies considerably. Bees have been known to obtain a load from a
single species such as poplar. When fireweed is yielding its maximum less than
10 flowers are necessary to produce a load. Researchers have found these
visiting in excess of 1000 flowers in one trip which required over two hours so
bees visit anywhere from 50 to 1000 flowers per trip. Foraging visits can be focused
to one plant although often its usually focused on multiple plants over several
hundred square feet. Individual bees generally devote most of visits in a day
to a single fruit tree.
Crop Constancy
Researchers have found fewer than 3% of field bees
visit more than one plant species on a trip when a specific species in a
foraging area begins to fail to yield an acceptable amount of nectar a worker
will shift her efforts to another source and possibly even another species of
flower. Often workers will recheck in original nectar source multiple times
even if she may be foraging in another direction and on a different species of
plant.
Mating Behavior
Queens have a short window of fertility within the
first week of their lives. They may mate for several consecutive days making
more than one flight on any given day. Drones actually start venturing on
mating flights when their 8 to 10 days old. Queens and drones both complete
mating flights only in the afternoon they fly for 5 to 30 minutes or more each
trip and queens can mate with drones located up to 10 or 13 km away.
Source:
D.F. Peer, Nipawin, Sask. Alberta Agriculture. Agdex 616-9. Revised April 1978.
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