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Long post ahead….
I spent Monday night in a lecture on swarm control but came away from it thinking that the lecturer got it wrong with respect to some of his assertions. This is an octogenarian beekeeper who has kept bees for most of his life and is well thought of. I'll not outline what a full artificial swarm involves as it is well covered elsewhere, especially on Dave Cushman's site.
The lecturer indicated that once the queen has been separated from the brood (or at least most of it) and placed in a new brood box with foundation etc located a few feet to one side of the original hive, there is no requirement to reduce the number of Q cells in the original colony, mentioning that there could be 10 or more Q cells. He stated that the first queen to hatch will just kill off all the other queens and they will NOT swarm. He then went on to explain that a few days after making the artificial swarm the number of foraging bees in the colonies can be balanced by swapping the positions of the two hives.
One of the other beekeepers queried these assertions, pointing out that if left to their own devices, bees will reach a point where they decide to swarm and if circumstances are right, they will issue a cast or casts. He made the point that if you fail to reduce the number of Q cells to two or so, you run the risk that the daughter colony will issue a cast or casts headed by virgin queens. He also said it was a myth that the first Queen to hatch will kill the other queens, again highlighting casts. The lecturer and one other strongly disagreed with this suggestion categorically stating that they could not and would not issue swarms/casts headed by virgin Queens as there were insufficient flying bees in the daughter colony for that to happen i.e. their method of artificial swarm is fool proof as a means of swarm control. They were adamant that the first queen to hatch will kill the other queens. Due to the 'strong' reaction the questioning beekeeper let the point drop.
Now, first off I doubt that the colony would allow the first hatched Q to kill off the others – it might happen if there in some instances but not all. I am particularly mindful of a recent article I read about an observation hive where the colony kept the ‘surplus’ Qs penned up in their cells until the first hatched Queen was successfully mated – the colony controlled what happened. I also see a huge hole in their contention that the daughter colony will not swarm because of a lack of flying bees. They chose to ignore the fact that the lecturer recommended 'balancing' the hives a few days after commencing the artificial swarm. This gives the bees a boost of foragers and increases colony numbers. To my mind this gives the daughter colony the numbers they said were needed to let them swarm: am I wrong?
Personally my inclination would be to make up a couple of Nucs with Q cells if the colony is strong enough or to reduce the number of Q cells down to 2 (heir and a spare…)
I have read a bit about temporal polyethism/temporal castes in honeybees and from the associated research it is argued that the role of bees changes depending on the needs of the colony e.g. if they need more foragers, house bees will be pushed outdoors a bit earlier than usual and foragers ‘regress’ back into house bees and reactivate their wax glands in preparation for swarming. By my thinking, the daughter colony will always have sufficient bees to allow it to issue a swarm headed by a virgin queen and potentially also issue casts – especially if the colonies have been balanced. I have seen enough pictures of small casts to know that bees will swarm/issue casts with very small numbers of bees so they could well decide to swarm with relatively few flying/foraging bees present in the hive.
Since I am a relatively new beekeeper and entering my first full year of beekeeping (and because of politics...) I didn't want to point out what I feel were inexactitudes.... That brings me to the font of knowledge that is this forum: is my thinking sound? Comments please!!
I spent Monday night in a lecture on swarm control but came away from it thinking that the lecturer got it wrong with respect to some of his assertions. This is an octogenarian beekeeper who has kept bees for most of his life and is well thought of. I'll not outline what a full artificial swarm involves as it is well covered elsewhere, especially on Dave Cushman's site.
The lecturer indicated that once the queen has been separated from the brood (or at least most of it) and placed in a new brood box with foundation etc located a few feet to one side of the original hive, there is no requirement to reduce the number of Q cells in the original colony, mentioning that there could be 10 or more Q cells. He stated that the first queen to hatch will just kill off all the other queens and they will NOT swarm. He then went on to explain that a few days after making the artificial swarm the number of foraging bees in the colonies can be balanced by swapping the positions of the two hives.
One of the other beekeepers queried these assertions, pointing out that if left to their own devices, bees will reach a point where they decide to swarm and if circumstances are right, they will issue a cast or casts. He made the point that if you fail to reduce the number of Q cells to two or so, you run the risk that the daughter colony will issue a cast or casts headed by virgin queens. He also said it was a myth that the first Queen to hatch will kill the other queens, again highlighting casts. The lecturer and one other strongly disagreed with this suggestion categorically stating that they could not and would not issue swarms/casts headed by virgin Queens as there were insufficient flying bees in the daughter colony for that to happen i.e. their method of artificial swarm is fool proof as a means of swarm control. They were adamant that the first queen to hatch will kill the other queens. Due to the 'strong' reaction the questioning beekeeper let the point drop.
Now, first off I doubt that the colony would allow the first hatched Q to kill off the others – it might happen if there in some instances but not all. I am particularly mindful of a recent article I read about an observation hive where the colony kept the ‘surplus’ Qs penned up in their cells until the first hatched Queen was successfully mated – the colony controlled what happened. I also see a huge hole in their contention that the daughter colony will not swarm because of a lack of flying bees. They chose to ignore the fact that the lecturer recommended 'balancing' the hives a few days after commencing the artificial swarm. This gives the bees a boost of foragers and increases colony numbers. To my mind this gives the daughter colony the numbers they said were needed to let them swarm: am I wrong?
Personally my inclination would be to make up a couple of Nucs with Q cells if the colony is strong enough or to reduce the number of Q cells down to 2 (heir and a spare…)
I have read a bit about temporal polyethism/temporal castes in honeybees and from the associated research it is argued that the role of bees changes depending on the needs of the colony e.g. if they need more foragers, house bees will be pushed outdoors a bit earlier than usual and foragers ‘regress’ back into house bees and reactivate their wax glands in preparation for swarming. By my thinking, the daughter colony will always have sufficient bees to allow it to issue a swarm headed by a virgin queen and potentially also issue casts – especially if the colonies have been balanced. I have seen enough pictures of small casts to know that bees will swarm/issue casts with very small numbers of bees so they could well decide to swarm with relatively few flying/foraging bees present in the hive.
Since I am a relatively new beekeeper and entering my first full year of beekeeping (and because of politics...) I didn't want to point out what I feel were inexactitudes.... That brings me to the font of knowledge that is this forum: is my thinking sound? Comments please!!