BernardBlack
Field Bee
- Joined
- May 7, 2016
- Messages
- 564
- Reaction score
- 43
- Location
- Co. Armagh
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 5
How long would a hive usually be Queenless for, before Laying Workers emerge?
If you mean emerge as in exiting the pupation stage, they are already there all of the time. It is the queen pheromones that keep the potentially laying workers under reasonable control.
If there are eggs or even brood in there they will make queen cells before the laying workers really start to lay ... normally only get laying workers when they are hopelessly queenless ...If say, the Queen was killed by accident... how long after that would you start seeing LW eggs?
Yeah...very quick in broodless Apideas.Brood pheromone is much stronger at inhibiting workers from laying than queen pheromones. So three weeks or more after queen gone is when the problem usually appears. In Apideas etc which are set up initially without any brood, evidence of laying workers appears within days of a queen going "missing"
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