Gilberdyke John
Queen Bee
- Joined
- May 5, 2013
- Messages
- 5,707
- Reaction score
- 2,015
- Location
- HU15 East Yorkshire
- Hive Type
- 14x12
- Number of Hives
- 10
I took two supers off today after inserting rhombus clearing boards yesterday. In one there were was a seam of bees which I brushed out back into the hive and discovered a patch of capped drone brood so no great surprise some bees didn't clear. Leaving the frame with brood till last I dug it out back to the foundation whereupon I saw movement on the exposed foundation wax. It was a very tiny pale grub about 3 mm long, about half a mm thick wriggling quickly and vanished into the mushed drone tissue which I discarded.
When I finished operations I started wondering what it had been. As it was in/under a drone cell I considered part of varroa life cycle but google doesn't show any images of varroa having a larval stage. Highly unlikely to be a bee grub as the remainder of the clump was capped and the grubs within at almost fully formed stage of development. Can anyone offer any suggestions?
When I finished operations I started wondering what it had been. As it was in/under a drone cell I considered part of varroa life cycle but google doesn't show any images of varroa having a larval stage. Highly unlikely to be a bee grub as the remainder of the clump was capped and the grubs within at almost fully formed stage of development. Can anyone offer any suggestions?