Beesnaturally
Field Bee
- Joined
- Jul 12, 2016
- Messages
- 929
- Reaction score
- 489
- Location
- Kent
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 100
I suggest you read Mitchell D. 2016 Ratios of colony mass to thermal conductance of tree and man-made nest enclosures of Apis mellifera: implications for survival, clustering, humidity regulation and Varroa destructor. Int. J. Biometeorol. 60, 629–638. (doi:10.1007/s00484-015-1057-z)
if you left your room via a trapdoor you would have less of a problem. The whole thing is covered in Mitchell D. 2017 Honey bee engineering: Top ventilation and top entrances. Am. Bee J. 157, 887–889. Your room with its tall door is like a top entrance hive
a) trapdoor above or below?
b) trapdoors can be opened or closed. Bees don't have that capacity, so I struggle to see the relevance.
c) I can see that having an entrance low or high will make a difference, and size and colony location the same.
noteworthy perhaps: bees like high nests (which trees offer) - but with height comes unbroken wind.
c) cavities generally form where branched die back (as their leaf area is overgrown) leaving a break in the protective bark. Water gathers at the bottom. The holes may be enlarged by ie woodpeckers. Some data of entrance size and location would be good. But remember that apple tree I spoke of earlier in the thread... Bees thrive where they can thrive.
I don't have time now to search for and read the whole thing, but I found the abstract:
"Abstract
In the absence of human intervention, the honeybee (Apis mellifera L.) usually constructs its nest in a tree within a tall, narrow, thick-walled cavity high above the ground (the enclosure); however, most research and apiculture is conducted in the thin-walled, squat wooden enclosures we know as hives. This experimental research, using various hives and thermal models of trees, has found that the heat transfer rate is approximately four to seven times greater in the hives in common use, compared to a typical tree enclosure in winter configuration. This gives a ratio of colony mass to lumped enclosure thermal conductance (MCR) of less than 0.8 kgW(-1) K for wooden hives and greater than 5 kgW(-1) K for tree enclosures. "
Front door factor.... Spherical cow factor...
"This result for tree enclosures implies higher levels of humidity in the nest, increased survival of smaller colonies and lower Varroa destructor breeding success. "
Note that 'implies'. Apply that note to all three claims.
"Many honeybee behaviours previously thought to be intrinsic may only be a coping mechanism for human intervention; for example, at an MCR of above 2 kgW(-1) K, clustering in a tree enclosure may be an optional, rare, heat conservation behaviour for established colonies, rather than the compulsory, frequent, life-saving behaviour that is in the hives in common use."
This approach seems entirely incognizant of the fact that bees are adapted to live in a wide range of climates. In the most southerly things will be very different to the northern limits. Open, again, to the spherical cow charge.
"The implied improved survival in hives with thermal properties of tree nests may help to solve some of the problems honeybees are currently facing in apiculture."
Yeah yeah, 'Implied and 'may' (ok 'may' is standard in scientific discussions - but still pay attention...).
The paper itself might take the sting out of some of these criticisms. It needs to.