Hivetool2021
New Bee
- Joined
- May 19, 2021
- Messages
- 53
- Reaction score
- 10
- Location
- Wiltshire
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 4
and hasnt one emerged?
New queens will be very small size
I've not been able to find any scientific evidence that supports either proposition. Is anyone else aware of any?
James
Age of comb has SOO much to do with it. In a study using 50 indoor OB hives with 10 fresh comb, 10 1yr old comb, 10 2yr old comb, 10 3yr old comb, and 10 4yr old comb... we made each one queenless with all having ages of brood from 1day eggs to capped. We recorded the number, placement, age of brood, cell sizes, feed, and emergence of each queen produced.
Once hatched we began recording their activities and gave each 48 hrs to chew up the other cells before we removed the excluders from the exits and allowed them to begin mating flights...
We then studied the length of time each flight took and how long each queen took before she began laying...
Each queen was allowed to lay for 30 days before they were killed and examined, and their patterns and laying rate was examined...
The end result was that 8 out the 10 queens from the fresh comb hives were equally matched to our average grafted queens in body weight and spermatheca testing, while the other 2 were lower weight and scored lower in spermatheca testing. However, they were all closely matched in the patterning and laying rate...
Each of the following age groups showed less and less quality, but each one did indeed produce at least 2 quality queens.
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