Why drone cells?

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SunnyRaes

House Bee
Joined
May 26, 2012
Messages
195
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Location
Devon
Hive Type
National
Number of Hives
5 planned, in reality 7 + 1 nuc + 1 A/S into a commercial for a friend
We have a hive with a laying worker (or probably less likely, a DLQ). We have been adding in new egg / brood frames to try to get her to stop, before requeening or merging in the next week or so.

Given that the frames are being donated from a known good queen and she is laying normal brood in the donating hive, why is the Q- hive seemingly creating predominantly drone brood?
 
laying workers can only make drones a drone laying queen has run out of sperm so also can only lay drone eggs. If it is a DLQ then adding frames of eggs wont do any good as the bees see themselves as queen right.
 
As veg says, no sperm involved, so haploid offspring.

If a DLQ, they are queen-right; laying workers can take several attempts withe frames of brood.

A DLQ is favourite, but you should be able to see, from the eggs laid, which it is.
 
As veg says, no sperm involved, so haploid offspring.

If a DLQ, they are queen-right; laying workers can take several attempts withe frames of brood.

A DLQ is favourite, but you should be able to see, from the eggs laid, which it is.

hi how can you tell from the eggs if they are not fertile ? do they look diferant
 
We will be putting in our third frame of brood tonight, so we're in it for the "long haul" and if a DLQ then we'll find her and dispatch her in due course.

Whatever it is that it laying in the hive is laying very occasionally and in a random pattern across many frames, however these odd eggs that are appearing are at the bottom of a cell. You basically find the odd egg here and there. No queen has been seen, so the assumption is a laying worker.

However my point is that the frames being donated are coming from a good fertile worker laying queen - the hive she is in is perfectly normal, so the queen has been fertilised
 
the eggs you are putting in from the donor hive should be normal worker unless of course they are drone eggs.

I dont think you can tell by looking at the eggs its only when they are capped you can tell they are drone.
 
hi how can you tell from the eggs if they are not fertile ? do they look diferant

No. The difference is that if they are laid by a drone-laying queen (DLQ) who has not been properly fertilised, you would expect one egg on the bottom of each cell. If laid by a laying worker, you would expect several to a cell, and for them to be attached to the sides, as her abdomen isn't long enough to reach the base of the cell or she doesn't have the correct instinct.
 

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