- Joined
- Jan 16, 2017
- Messages
- 917
- Reaction score
- 572
- Location
- Lincolnshire, UK
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 5
Someone's been practicing queen marking and you've acquired their drones?Anybody else seen this?
One hive has 'painted' drones. I haven't done any marking. Maybe the pale mark is part of the cocoon stuck on the thorax. ? Or some genetic glitch. ?
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I don't know. some times it's just a pale sheen.Someone's been practicing queen marking and you've acquired their drones?
I don't know. some times it's just a pale sheen.
Saw Roger Patterson lecture where he cast doubt on the amount of drifting that we are told happens. Hive sits 5m from any other hive with 2 bushes in-between.
David Evans quotes various research papers on drifting here
Based on the information there I'd suggest it's quite likely that they're "alien" drones that someone else has been practising queen marking on.
James
Perhaps drifting from remote apiaries more common?
I had marked drones in my hives over a period of years.I don't know. some times it's just a pale sheen.
Saw Roger Patterson lecture where he cast doubt on the amount of drifting that we are told happens. Hive sits 5m from any other hive with 2 bushes in-between.
It's been proven - I think there was an experiment some time ago when marked drones were recorded at apiatries some miles from their 'home' hives where they were markedit could be quite beneficial to the species as a whole in terms of genetic diversity if some drones can (repeatedly perhaps) move between colonies that are relatively distant from each other
Trick of the light maybe. Just local mongrels. They look more brown in real life. I don't know of any black bee enthusiasts locally.Blimey, them is black bees!
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