- Joined
- Jan 13, 2015
- Messages
- 7,639
- Reaction score
- 669
- Location
- Bedfordshire, England
- Hive Type
- Langstroth
- Number of Hives
- Quite a few
My queens emerge in an incubator, have a numbered opilath plate stuck on their thorax and are then introduced to a mating hive. Consequently, I can keep track of individual queens in a way that I couldn't do if they were just marked with a coloured Posca pen.
The introduction stage is a very risky part of a queens life and it seems crazy to me that a queen would leave her nuc and enter another. Nevertheless, this is exactly what I observed with a recent batch of queens. Number 50 left her nuc and entered a nuc 2 positions further down (they are arranged in a circle with entrances facing in opposite directions). Each nuc is also marked with the queens number so I know which nuc each queen should be in. I saw no sign of queen 51 which should have been in this hive but queen 50 was striding over the face of the comb as though she owned the place. The curious thing is: why would she choose to leave her own nuc and why would the new nuc accept her in preference to their own queen as both emerged at the same time so were both in the same physiological state?
I'd be interested to hear your views/comments, particularly if you have observed anything similar.
The introduction stage is a very risky part of a queens life and it seems crazy to me that a queen would leave her nuc and enter another. Nevertheless, this is exactly what I observed with a recent batch of queens. Number 50 left her nuc and entered a nuc 2 positions further down (they are arranged in a circle with entrances facing in opposite directions). Each nuc is also marked with the queens number so I know which nuc each queen should be in. I saw no sign of queen 51 which should have been in this hive but queen 50 was striding over the face of the comb as though she owned the place. The curious thing is: why would she choose to leave her own nuc and why would the new nuc accept her in preference to their own queen as both emerged at the same time so were both in the same physiological state?
I'd be interested to hear your views/comments, particularly if you have observed anything similar.