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2.6
Hive Reproduction
When the brood nest gets congested with lots of workers, the workers create more queens
Two queens typically won't live in the same hive
Typically the existing queen will leave once the new queen cells are capped.
When the hive swarms, lead workers secrete a pheromone that workers and the queen follow
About half the colony leaves with the queen
This is a SWARM (on a branch it's called a cluster)
It's True!
The picture is of a brood frame. You can see the covered cells that currently contain pupae.
Tip
Bees that have space to expand into tend not to swarm.
Backyard Beekeeping
1.
About
1.1
About this course
2.
About Bees
2.1
The Benefits of Bee Keeping
2.2
About Insects
2.3
About Honey Bees
2.4
Bee Reproduction
2.5
Bees in a Hive
2.6
Hive Reproduction
2.7
Swarms
2.8
Starting a Hive
2.9
What Bees Produce
3.
The Hive
3.1
About Hives
3.2
Parts of a Hive
3.3
Full Depth vs Half Depth Boxes
3.4
About Boxes
3.5
Frames
3.6
Hive Entrance
3.7
Location
3.8
Water
4.
Hive Maintenance
4.1
Protective Clothing
4.2
Opening the hive
4.3
About Maintenance
4.4
Bee Keeper Responsibilities
4.5
Managing Swarms
4.6
Spring Maintenance
4.7
Summer Maintenance
4.8
Bugs in a Hive
4.9
Common Hive Bugs
5.
Honey and Wax
5.1
Uncapping
5.2
Spinning Honey
5.3
Straining Honey
5.4
Separating Wax from Honey
5.5
Cleaning Wax
6.
Resources
6.1
Local Bee Guilds
6.2
Supplies
6.3
Purchasing Equipment
6.4
Resources
6.5
Our Thanks
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