- Joined
- Jul 23, 2009
- Messages
- 36,571
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- Location
- Ceredigion
- Hive Type
- 14x12
- Number of Hives
- 6
Crikey there’s a lot of it.
I definitely would change the queen.
I definitely would change the queen.
I just read out your post to my hubby but apparently the idea of bees in the bedroom crosses the lineAll I could suggest is that, if they somehow make it through the winter and hang on long enough, you could requeen them, if there really are enough bees left to make it worth it. (Otherwise: waste of queen.)
I do sympathise with your newbie try-anything sentiment though. I briefly had one little colony inside a mosquito net in my bedroom once, when I couldn't protect them from wasps outside! (To no avail in the end - colony not viable.)
Yes, the queen's still laying and the brood seems to be developing OK so maybe they will get through the winter OK and can still be savedIrregular brood as well, with larvae of different age/stage.
Ok I see the sac brood but not the bald. Is it the perforations in the capings - I imagined total lack of cap. Couldn’t see any eyes.Here's some more.
The work is progressive so the perforations are variable, but once the cap is off removal starts with chewing of eyes and head and so on; it suggests a degree of hygienic behaviour, though that isn't unusual.Ok I see the sac brood but not the bald. Is it the perforations in the capings - I imagined total lack of cap. Couldn’t see any eyes.
I've had the odd patch of bald brood and I've never seen the larvae cannibalisedThe work is progressive so the perforations are variable, but once the cap is off removal starts with chewing of eyes and head and so on; it suggests a degree of hygienic behaviour, though that isn't unusual.
Good explanationI had several colonies with genetic bald brood a few years ago and can trace them all back all to queens reared from a particular colony (which was selected for Q rearing as it had several desirable characteristics . It persisted for several years in my stocks with one or two cases found each year but I have more or less selectively bred it out (although there are colonies of bald brood still persisting in the area belong to neighbouring beekeepers so I check my bees every year and replace queens as and when found) . Genetic Bald brood usually indicates a high level of inbreeding as I understand larvae need to be homozygous recessive for a particular allele or alleles of the gene. The larvae are thought to be unable to produce the capping pheromone or enough capping pheromone at the right time to trigger the workers to construct a wax cap over their cells. As this is the same pheromone that seems to attract Varroa to enter the cells just prior to capping, bald brood larvae don't seem to get Varroa ( I have looked and not found any yet) . Interestingly Bald brood is far more common these days of endemic varroa so perhaps there is selection pressure favouring this allele. It is rather strange seeing the heads and eyes of the soon to emerge workers "looking" at you.
The different routes to bald brood - wax moth, queen genetics and viral & varroa issues - may explain bees' different responses.I've had the odd patch of bald brood and I've never seen the larvae cannibalised
I’s picked up from somewhere that the larvae could still develop into adults despite being uncapped. Is that just wrong? Though I guess it could depend on the cause??The work is progressive so the perforations are variable, but once the cap is off removal starts with chewing of eyes and head and so on; it suggests a degree of hygienic behaviour, though that isn't unusual.
Not wrong - totally correct. The strange thing about bald brood is that the larvae still develop normally and the colony carries on perfectly. It sometimes makes you wonder why they bother capping the brood in the first placeI’s picked up from somewhere that the larvae could still develop into adults despite being uncapped. Is that just wrong? Though I guess it could depend on the cause??
Not wrong - totally correct. The strange thing about bald brood is that the larvae still develop normally and the colony carries on perfectly. It sometimes makes you wonder why they bother capping the brood in the first place
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