BeekeeperDan
New Bee
I've seen bald brood before but this is uneven and irregular. This is a thriving colony I removed from inside a roof a few weeks ago. It's been fed but not yet treated with MAQS as had to order some more and waiting for them to arrive. I can see very little wing damage and, obviously, the break in brood rearing will have knocked mite levels down a bit but I always treat bees in quarantine before returning to my apiary. They are superseding and have raised areasonable sealed queen cell. I am tempted to leave this to hatch and see if this is a genetic trait by assessing the brood of the new queen. I could easily requeen but i am very curious as never seen it before. All brood is a lovely pearly white, no obvious virus load and I can see no scales in the cells. No ropey brood or weird smells. Please give me your thoughts?
I've seen bald brood before but this is uneven and irregular. This is a thriving colony I removed from inside a roof a few weeks ago. It's been fed but not yet treated with MAQS as had to order some more and waiting for them to arrive. I can see very little wing damage and, obviously, the break in brood rearing will have knocked mite levels down a bit but I always treat bees in quarantine before returning to my apiary. They are superseding and have raised areasonable sealed queen cell. I am tempted to leave this to hatch and see if this is a genetic trait by assessing the brood of the new queen. I could easily requeen but i am very curious as never seen it before. All brood is a lovely pearly white, no obvious virus load and I can see no scales in the cells. No ropey brood or weird smells. Please give me your thoughts?
I've seen bald brood before but this is uneven and irregular. This is a thriving colony I removed from inside a roof a few weeks ago. It's been fed but not yet treated with MAQS as had to order some more and waiting for them to arrive. I can see very little wing damage and, obviously, the break in brood rearing will have knocked mite levels down a bit but I always treat bees in quarantine before returning to my apiary. They are superseding and have raised areasonable sealed queen cell. I am tempted to leave this to hatch and see if this is a genetic trait by assessing the brood of the new queen. I could easily requeen but i am very curious as never seen it before. All brood is a lovely pearly white, no obvious virus load and I can see no scales in the cells. No ropey brood or weird smells. Please give me your thoughts?
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