- Honey bee life cycle
The honey bee life cycle, here referring exclusively to the domesticated
Western honey bee , depends greatly on their social structure.Colony life
Unlike a
bumble bee colony or apaper wasp colony, the life of a honey bee colony is perennial. There are three castes of honey bees: queens, which produce eggs; drones or males, which mate with new queens and have no stinger; and workers, which are all non-reproducing females. The queen lays eggs singly in cells of the comb.Larva e hatch from eggs in three to four days. They are then fed by worker bees and develop through several stages in the cells. Cells are capped by worker bees when the larvapupa tes. Queens and drones are larger than workers and so require larger cells to develop. A colony may typically consist of tens of thousands of individuals.While some colonies live in hives provided by humans, so-called "wild" colonies (although all honey bees remain wild, even when cultivated and managed by humans) typically prefer a nest site that is clean, dry, protected from the weather, about 20 liters in volume with a 4 to 6 cm² entrance about 3 m above the ground, and preferably facing south or south-east.
Development
Development from egg to emerging bee varies among queens, workers and drones. Queens emerge from their cells in 16 days, workers in 21 days and drones in 24 days. Only one queen is usually present in a hive. New
virgin queen s develop in enlarged cells through differential feeding ofroyal jelly by workers. When the existing queen ages or dies or the colony becomes very large a new queen is raised by theworker bee s. The virgin queen takes one or several nuptial flights and once she is established starts laying eggs in the hive.A fertile queen is able to lay fertilized or unfertilized eggs. Each unfertilized egg contains a unique combination of 50% of the queen's genes [ [http://members.aol.com/queenb95/genetics.html#anchor1561346 Bee breeding] ] and develops into a haploid drone. The fertilized eggs develop into either workers or virgin queens.
The average lifespan of a queen is three to four years; drones usually die upon mating or are expelled from the hive before hibernation; and workers may live for a few weeks in the summer and several months in areas with an extended winter.
The weight progression of the worker egg, larvae.
Source: Stone, David M. [http://www.uni.uiuc.edu/~stone2/bee_overview.html Overview of Bee Biology] University of Illinois Laboratory Highschool; web accessed Oct. 2006
ources
* [http://www.bee-info.com/biology-bee/development.html Development of honeybees] bee-info.com, accessed Oct 2005
*cite journal |quotes=no |url=http://www.springerlink.com/content/f292tp34326843v0/?p=17e05ee7a946444a8f70394ef6c97eb7&pi=1 |title=Caste in the honey bee |author=Stanley E. Flanders |year=1960 |journal=Insectes Sociaux |volume=7 |issue=1 |pages=9–16 |doi=10.1007/BF02225754
*cite journal |quotes=no |url=http://www.springerlink.com/content/g73881w51375p542/ |title=Die Kastenentstehung bei der Honigbiene, "Apis mellifica" L|author=H. Rembold |journal=Naturwissenschaften |volume=51 |issue=3 |year=1964 |doi=10.1007/BF00603442 |pages=49
* [http://www.cyberbee.net/huangpub/2001JTB.pdf Temporal Polyethism in Bees]ee also
*
Bee bole
*Winter cluster
*Bee coloniesExternal links
* [http://www.fao.org/docrep/t0104e/T0104E05.htm#Chapter%202%20Colony%20life%20and%20social%20organization Life cycle information] by the
FAO
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.