SussexBea
New Bee
- Joined
- Jun 15, 2015
- Messages
- 6
- Reaction score
- 0
- Location
- Sussex
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 7
Hi, perhaps you could help clarify a few points..
Recently I went with a friend to collect some buckfast queens he'd bought from a reputable breeder, who used to work for the bee unit and owns a nationally recognised bee equipment supplier. A couple looked like buckfast but the others were darker. When asked, the seller said "they are raised from the same queen but were put in different cell builder nucs and so could be different colours." All I can think is that somehow a different royal jelly affects colour? Doesn't seem right to me..
Secondly, back in the day when I first learnt about bees on a course, run by a bee inspector, I was told that a queen will mate with 15 or so drones and that the sperm would be used from one drone, and then another and so on. ie, brood would go through stages of colouring/traits etc. Dominant and recessive genes not withstanding.. It wasn't suggested that it was stored separately just that it kind of backed up in order. I distinctly remember being told this but they mix together in the spermatheca don't they? Was the bee inspector getting at something else?
Finally (and thanks for reading this far!!) if you grafted from a buckfast queen but the virgins mated naturally in an urban area with any tom, dick or harry drone can the the newly mated queen be advertised as a buckfast?
thanks!
Recently I went with a friend to collect some buckfast queens he'd bought from a reputable breeder, who used to work for the bee unit and owns a nationally recognised bee equipment supplier. A couple looked like buckfast but the others were darker. When asked, the seller said "they are raised from the same queen but were put in different cell builder nucs and so could be different colours." All I can think is that somehow a different royal jelly affects colour? Doesn't seem right to me..
Secondly, back in the day when I first learnt about bees on a course, run by a bee inspector, I was told that a queen will mate with 15 or so drones and that the sperm would be used from one drone, and then another and so on. ie, brood would go through stages of colouring/traits etc. Dominant and recessive genes not withstanding.. It wasn't suggested that it was stored separately just that it kind of backed up in order. I distinctly remember being told this but they mix together in the spermatheca don't they? Was the bee inspector getting at something else?
Finally (and thanks for reading this far!!) if you grafted from a buckfast queen but the virgins mated naturally in an urban area with any tom, dick or harry drone can the the newly mated queen be advertised as a buckfast?
thanks!