Meiosis drone honey bee

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Thanks for that - I actually didn't think of diploid drones! I presume their offspring would suffer from trisomy - I would have expected them to be non-viable or, at least, not really fit for purpose which is, I suppose, why they're removed.


The link does say they can be reared in the lab. Would breeding from them would cause triploidy bees?
 
I thought that since a drone was haploid, there could be no meiosis, i.e. sperm production was entirely mitotic with identical copies. Have I misunderstood something?

how i understood it is that it looks a bit like mitosis in the sense that in Meiosis I is aborted and dna is only duplicated, not separated in anaphase I and Telophase I. you start Meiosis II then with 1 nucleus instead of 2.
 
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