oxnatbees
House Bee
- Joined
- Apr 15, 2012
- Messages
- 310
- Reaction score
- 189
- Location
- Oxfordshire UK
- Hive Type
- warre
- Number of Hives
- 6
Today I saw four bees wrestling another worker away from their entrance and, I think, trying to chuck it off the landing board.
I assumed it was a robber or otherwise unwelcome, but I couldn't figure out how they were fighting. They seemed to be using their mouthparts to drag it while it clung to the landing board - took them a minute to move it one inch. I thought they might be chewing off its wings, but those seemed intact. But if they threw it off surely it would just fly back? Perhaps it was related and had merely irritated them, so their full-on dirty fighting mode wasn't triggered.
I've seen guards go for bumblebees too near the hive entrance by landing on their backs and using their sting, but is there some kind of etiquette between honeybees? How exactly do the bouncers keep undesirables out?
I bet you're going to say "it depends on the colony, phase of the moon, what they've been eating, if they're stressed and if they read the Daily Mail".
I assumed it was a robber or otherwise unwelcome, but I couldn't figure out how they were fighting. They seemed to be using their mouthparts to drag it while it clung to the landing board - took them a minute to move it one inch. I thought they might be chewing off its wings, but those seemed intact. But if they threw it off surely it would just fly back? Perhaps it was related and had merely irritated them, so their full-on dirty fighting mode wasn't triggered.
I've seen guards go for bumblebees too near the hive entrance by landing on their backs and using their sting, but is there some kind of etiquette between honeybees? How exactly do the bouncers keep undesirables out?
I bet you're going to say "it depends on the colony, phase of the moon, what they've been eating, if they're stressed and if they read the Daily Mail".