Laboratory Bees - Moving Hives

in #steemstem5 years ago (edited)


By vizyweb on pixabay.com


Disclaimer: All pictures below have been taken by me, and all information stems from the university's beekeeper, which is why I won't provide online sources.


Today, I was allowed to watch our beekeeper move bees from an old hive to a new one, so of course, I took plenty of pictures and asked just as many questions!
The bees shown in this post are mainly used to train new beekeepers and to teach students about beekeeping.

First, the fresh hive was prepared. As you can see, it consists of a wooden box that's stacked on a wooden square with a net as a floor.

IMG_20190408_111510.jpg

Inside, the beekeeper placed a single wooden frame. There are different kinds of these frames, the one used here has no "building template", so the bees can decide freely what they want to build. At this time of the year, that will be combs for drones.

Frames with a template are used to guarantee that the bees either make honeycombs filled with honey or combs with developing worker bees.

IMG_20190408_111535.jpg

Here's an example of a filled frame:

IMG_20190408_111254.jpg

After the hive was assembled, it was time to grab this thing:

IMG_20190408_111349-min.jpg

If you look closely, you can see smoke coming out of it. That smoke serves to move the bees away from areas where they might be squished during the move. A squished bee produces alarm pheromones, and the other bees will become aggressive and attack.

And that's not exactly the desired outcome.

Carefully, the top of the hive (and a sheet of plastic covering it to protect from water) is lifted off, and the smoke blown onto the bees.

IMG_20190408_111629-min.jpg

And here you have it, the inside of the old hive!

The bees shown here were very calm, which is primarily due to their genetics. If you have a particularly aggressive swarm, the only thing you can do to make it less aggressive is to switch out the queen for one with less aggressive gene material.

IMG_20190408_111235-min.jpg

The wax you can see here on the top are combs the bees built for drones. They're larger than the ones for workers, as the drones are larger.

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Because the wax was on the outside of the wooden frames, the beekeeper had to scrape it off. Luckily, that gave me the opportunity to take a picture of a big, fat bee larva!

IMG_20190408_112753-min.jpg

The old wooden frames were taken out one by one, and checked if they're still okay. After about a year, the wax turns dark brown and the frames should be switched out. But not all frames in the old hive were that old, and could be moved - together with the bees sitting on them.

IMG_20190408_111714-min.jpg
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Maybe you wonder how a beekeeper knows which honeycombs do in fact contain honey, and which contain larvae. To answer that, I want to show you the following picture.

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Do you see the brown cabs covering the holes? They look a lot different from the honeycomb in the third picture. That's because eggs have been laid in there.

Here you can see two of the holes in the process of being closed:

IMG_20190408_112005-min.jpg

Because the queen lays her eggs from the inside of the frame to the outside, the new bees hatch from the inside out too. That behavior gets you an interesting pattern of open and closed holes.

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Speaking of the queen, I got a good look at her too of course!

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The yellow dot has been added with a paint stick and is supposed to stay on the bee. In this particular case, the yellow color indicates that the queen has hatched in 2017.

Knowing how old the queen is is important to the beekeeper, especially because this way, a new queen can be easily spotted.

The large queen doesn't have a mark? In that case, the hive has disposed of the old queen and nurtured a new one.

The disposal of an old queen is not a nice process. Worker bees sting their queen to death and rip out her wings and legs.

A new queen develops from a larva fed with royal jelly. In the beginning, even worker bee larvae are fed with royal jelly, but only the future queens are fed with it during their whole development. They practically swim in it the whole time, while other larvae have to beg to be fed.

Until now, nobody really knows what epigenetic factors are triggered by the royal jelly, that cause a normal larva to develop into a queen.

If you like horror stories, I warmly recommend reading the short story "Royal Jelly" by Roald Dahl, which is all I can ever think of when somebody mentions this "food of the queens".

Edit: I totally forgot to add the picture with the bee eggs!

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See the tiny white things that look a bit like miniature rice? That's bee eggs.





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I was lucky to do some spring time checks on bees six years ago (about this very time of the year) and it mostly looked the same. Only I did not see any queen.

We actually got instructed to wear no black clothes because it might irritate the bees.

Haha, I had my black leather jacket on because I actually didn't expect the whole bee thing to happen. Was just passing by to get some bees from the winter hive for someone else's experiments, and was then invited to come watch the beekeeper move the other bees.

Guess I was lucky that these particular bees are super chill!

According to the beekeeper, she can even let kindergarten kids check them out, without having to worry about someone getting stung.

Fantastic! Bees are amazing, and their hives are phenomenal. I’ve had several opportunities to be up close and personal with apiary bee hives. Watching them work in person is awe striking. Your photographs are really well taken! Thanks for sharing !

Fascinating info, @suesa!
Also some really nice photos...

Me



One of our 3:

Thank you ^__^

It was fun taking the pics, although I constantly felt like something is stinging me.

Were you wearing protection?

Nope. I actually hadn't expected to be allowed to watch, I had been on the way to something else xD but according to the beekeeper, her bees are super chill. And I didn't get stung after all.

Totally cool; I wear protection if we're going to open any up, and I also carry an Epipen...

I mean, I usually wear protection too when I have to catch some for an experiment or clean up the winter hive.

This specific hive is apparently so calm, that the beekeeper feels safe showing it to kindergarten kids, who end up sticking their noses into it.

Very, very calm bees xD

Not even the beekeeper was really wearing protection, just a pair of latex gloves (as you might see in the pictures).

Yeah,@suesa, my bees are mostly captured wild and they don't play too well with others! We subdue them with a little smoke, but if we don't, they do tend to get a little aggressive and defensive. Ours are not the scientifically controlled or purchased bees.

<3

Very fascinating :-)
My great uncle owns also a beehive some hundred meters from where I live. There are actually quite a few here around but I've never seen into one by myself.

Beeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeebzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee

This is a different kinda step up from the hives i grew up seeing. Ours were wild, oval like hanging down from trees or where they would decide to build. We didn't go near them but the honey was a delicacy and medicinal. I would really like to be this close as much as I know how painful the stings are :D

You answered most of my questions as I read along!

But I got 2 more: Was the beekeeper wearing a full body suit, or were some parts of him uncovered? Just trying to understand how timid these bees are.

Do you have any opinions on tap-honey (bee houses where you kinda just turn on the tap to get the honey, like this)? I'm just wondering if these are marketing ploys. Otherwise, why isn't everyone using them?

She was wearing jeans and a jacket because it was cold outside. And a pair of latex gloves to not get her hands dirty/sticky. That was practically it. I've also seen her pick up bees and set them aside with her bare fingers in the past.
These bees are super chill, and the beekeeper is badass.

As I am not a beekeeper myself, I can't really say anything about the tap-honey. Not sure how practical that is in reality, sorry ^^'

Great to see another post from you @suesa and fantastic photos to boot. I didn't know they painted the queens to determine the year they were born. Kind of a neat low-tech trick to monitor them.

Lucky you! And lucky us could see here in very close photos like i was there too, interested things about the bee! Nice info!

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