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BEEKEEPING LEARNING CENTER => GENERAL BEEKEEPING - MAIN POSTING FORUM. => Topic started by: billdean on May 14, 2019, 10:09:19 PM

Title: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: billdean on May 14, 2019, 10:09:19 PM
One of my over winter hives lost it's queen or I accidentally smooched her. Time frame: 4/27 I found 4 capped queen cells. Split the hive and left the cells in the original position added a queen to the split. 5/1 went back into the queen less hive and found the cells were gone. What the heck? I installed a caged queen on 5/3 in a push in cage. 5/7 released the queen as things seemed OK.
Today I went in to check for eggs. The pictures below shows what I found. Laying worker? or confused newly laying queen?  I also found on the front ramp of the hive the dead queen. The queen was still nice and soft like she had just been killed. I added a frame of eggs from another hive and closed it up. If this is a laying worker hive, I would like to cut my losses now and shake it out, instead of wasting more brood on this hive. If I go back in a few days and they have started queen cells, is the hive saved? Or in a few days when I go back in, if there is not queen cells started that would defiantly mean they think they have a queen even if it is a laying worker? Am I correct on this?
Top photo is worker comb
bottom photo is drone comb


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Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: iddee on May 14, 2019, 10:31:22 PM
New queen. Be happy.   :cheesy:
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: billdean on May 14, 2019, 11:06:58 PM
Quote from: iddee on May 14, 2019, 10:31:22 PM
New queen. Be happy.   :cheesy:

So iddee are you saying there is a new queen even though I found the one I installed dead today? It was a marked queen with a green dot which is what I put in there and released on 5/7. Dead. That must mean that the hive all ready had a queen or there is a laying worker. The frame of eggs I put in there today should tell the story here shortly? Should it not? I hope your right!
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: billdean on May 14, 2019, 11:11:18 PM
The drone comb had 3 and 4 eggs in them if you can see them in the picture, but the worker comb had just one egg per cell.
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: TheHoneyPump on May 15, 2019, 01:16:13 AM
My questions
My thoughts

Just how big is this hive?  How many boxes, how many frames of bees?  How hard can it be to find a queen to confirm if there is one or not?

There can be any of a number of scenarios that arrived at this point. Which one is unclear, because of the introduction of a new queen in the process. 
As best I can deduce from your description and the pictures, here is what I think.
- you have laying workers. Evidenced by the shear number of multiple eggs in the drone comb.  A new queen figuring out her equipment may lay two eggs in a cell here and there.  Definitely not many eggs per cell and certainly not all in the same area. (drone comb or not)
- the laying workers killed the new virgin(s) from the queen cells noted.
- the new queen was initially accepted by the straight bees around her and got to lay some eggs. As she moved on, she encountered laying worker(s) roaming on the same comb. Then the queen was killed.
- the laying workers are still there going at it.
- Do not waste any time and resources nor another queen on this hive. Even if they make queen cells from the comb given, they will kill those queens too.

Here is the suggested fix.
- First, go through the hive thoroughly looking for queens.  Virgins or laying, doesn't matter.  If you find one or more, cage them and put them in your pocket. 
- Next goto your strongest hive, open it up and put a newspaper on top.  Pickup this laying worker hive and put it on top.  The strong hive will sort out this mess for you. Leave them alone for 10 days. Alternative is if this laying worker hive is a small colony, just shake it out in the middle of the bee yard and take all the equipment away.  Do not put the hive back where it was.  Force them to beg into the other hives, which will sort them all out.  Use the bees to fix the bees ;)
- Next go to your second and third strongest hives to take some resources to make up nuc(s) for each of the caged queens in your pocket.  Set out those nucs. Leave the nucs alone for 25 days.
- Come back later to see what you have in the nucs then rebuild the hive(s).

Done.

Hope that helps!
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: iddee on May 15, 2019, 05:59:44 AM
Laying workers don't get all eggs to the bottom of the cell. Many are deposited on the sides. Your pics have all of them in the bottom.
A new queen will lay as high as 4 eggs in a cell, but laying workers will lay 6, 8, even more per cell. Laying workers will never have as many single eggs standing up in the bottom of cells as your pics have.

Do as you said and watch for queen cells on the frame of eggs you supplied.You will not find any, but will find capped worker brood in a week
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: Oldbeavo on May 15, 2019, 07:30:39 AM
Were the 4/27 Q-cells  where the queen come from, she was there as a virgin If she was there, then the time lapse to now would account for mating time and laying.
The bees have tolerated your introduced Q until their young Q has started laying, they are happy with her so bump off the introduced Q. Bit like is a supersedure when they keep the old Q until the new one is approved.
I have had multi laying young Q's become good Q eventually.
Wait to see if brood caps, then decide on the next step.
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: Ben Framed on May 15, 2019, 10:52:03 AM
Quote from: iddee on May 15, 2019, 05:59:44 AM
Laying workers don't get all eggs to the bottom of the cell. Many are deposited on the sides. Your pics have all of them in the bottom.
A new queen will lay as high as 4 eggs in a cell, but laying workers will lay 6, 8, even more per cell. Laying workers will never have as many single eggs standing up in the bottom of cells as your pics have.

Do as you said and watch for queen cells on the frame of eggs you supplied.You will not find any, but will find capped worker brood in a week

Good information here iddee, sounds logical to me. Thanks for posting.

Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: Ben Framed on May 15, 2019, 11:53:38 AM
@ HP
Good information on how to deal with a laying worker hive, thanks for posting
Phillip
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: Nock on May 15, 2019, 12:01:49 PM
Some good info in this thread.
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: Ben Framed on May 15, 2019, 12:04:55 PM
Quote from: Oldbeavo on May 15, 2019, 07:30:39 AM
Were the 4/27 Q-cells  where the queen come from, she was there as a virgin If she was there, then the time lapse to now would account for mating time and laying.
The bees have tolerated your introduced Q until their young Q has started laying, they are happy with her so bump off the introduced Q. Bit like is a supersedure when they keep the old Q until the new one is approved.
I have had multi laying young Q's become good Q eventually.
Wait to see if brood caps, then decide on the next step.

Very logical.
Title: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: TheHoneyPump on May 15, 2019, 01:17:28 PM
A laying worker will easily back in down to the bottom of a larger drone cell. I have never seen a new queen lay more that two in a cell, and those cells are far apart.
Perhaps review the scenario I described that explains the presence of both.
I stand by my assessment based on the information available.  You can keep with the try this try that wait and see approach, losing valuable time and resources.  Ending with a completely failed set of attempts and lost bees biomass. Or you can get into it and deal with the problem directly now to set them straight starting today and make use of the bees.
Let us know what you end up doing and how it all played out in 3 weeks.
Good luck with the hive.
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: BeeMaster2 on May 15, 2019, 01:46:23 PM
THP,
In my observation hive I have seen a newly mated queen lay three of four eggs in a cell the first couple of days and then settle down to laying only one egg per day. She was laying the eggs in the bottom of the cells. I was a bit concerned at first because I was also told by experienced beeks that queens do not lay more than 2 in a cell. After that I also found triple eggs in my field hives.
I check the location of the eggs to tell if it is laying workers or a queen.
Jim Altmiller
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: billdean on May 15, 2019, 02:11:14 PM
Quote from: TheHoneyPump on May 15, 2019, 01:17:28 PM
A laying worker will easily back in down to the bottom of a larger drone cell. I have never seen a new queen lay more that two in a cell, and those cells are far apart.
Perhaps review the scenario I described that explains the presence of both.
I stand by my assessment based on the information available.  You can keep with the try this try that wait and see approach, losing valuable time and resources.  Ending with a completely failed set of attempts and lost bees biomass. Or you can get into it and deal with the problem directly now to set them straight starting today and make use of the bees.
Let us know what you end up doing and how it all played out in 3 weeks.
Good luck with the hive.

The smaller worker cells only have one egg in the bottom of the cells. A few have 2 in the bottom. Can a laying worker do that every time?

A few more days is what I am going to give this hive. This is based on my observation of it and in put from here. Prior to yesterday of them killing the caged queen the hive was angry all the time. You could not go into the yard without them attaching you. If you opened it up 10 or 20 guard bees would attack relentlessly. I could tell by the way they acted something was wrong. Always sitting on the front porch in a group as if they had nothing to do, while every other hive was booming.
Today, the day after they killed the caged queen they are acting like a normal hive. Coming and going, bring in pollen. There is quite a difference in their attitude and the way the hive is working.
My gut feeling is there was a virgin queen in the hive when I introduced the caged queen. The weather has been bad, cold, raining for a couple of weeks. Not mating weather for sure. But in saying that a little more time should tell. When I do not know what to do it has been my experience to do nothing. I wish I could follow that most of the time. This time I will! I will be back with what I have found in a few more days. Thanks for everyones input!
Title: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: TheHoneyPump on May 15, 2019, 02:22:41 PM
*************
The smaller worker cells only have one egg in the bottom of the cells. A few have 2 in the bottom. Can a laying worker do that every time?
*************

No LW cannot.  However that introduced mated queen likely laid those ones, shortly before she was killed ...
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: iddee on May 15, 2019, 04:22:35 PM
A week will tell the tale.
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: Ben Framed on May 18, 2019, 12:01:40 AM
I have a question, will the nurse bees remove all the eggs in the drone combs or will they leave one egg for business?
Thanks, Phillip
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: Oldbeavo on May 19, 2019, 07:49:53 AM
A young queen will multi lay then settle down, just wait and see how the cells are capped, drone or normal.
A lot of the time we go $^* is going on, don't know, shut up the hive and check next week. there are not many instant disasters in bee keeping and most of the time the bees are right even though we think we are managing the hive.
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: van from Arkansas on May 20, 2019, 11:30:02 AM
Some of those cells on the bottom pic have 5 eggs in a single cell.  That is an indication of a laying worker as explained by HP.  I agree with HP: introduced queen laid in top, then killed by laying workers.
All good things.
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: billdean on May 20, 2019, 12:23:10 PM
The pictures on my first post is of the same comb. The distance from the drone comb and worker comb in that pic is less than 1 inch. You can see the transition in the second pic.  Apparently some think the laying work and the introduced queen were laying side by side, Maybe.  I am not sure what is going on yet but I will be opening the hive up possibly tomorrow and checking again. It's 46* right now so I am going to wait until its warmer, hopefully that's tomorrow.
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: Ben Framed on May 20, 2019, 02:19:26 PM
Very interesting.....
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: van from Arkansas on May 20, 2019, 02:26:09 PM
Apparently some think the laying work and the introduced queen were laying side by side, Maybe.

I don?t see where any person suggested the laying side by side.  Did I miss something?

Bill; BTW cool looking dog, has that happy ya want to play look.  Mans best friend.
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: billdean on May 21, 2019, 01:26:28 PM
Quote from: iddee on May 15, 2019, 05:59:44 AM
Laying workers don't get all eggs to the bottom of the cell. Many are deposited on the sides. Your pics have all of them in the bottom.
A new queen will lay as high as 4 eggs in a cell, but laying workers will lay 6, 8, even more per cell. Laying workers will never have as many single eggs standing up in the bottom of cells as your pics have.


Do as you said and watch for queen cells on the frame of eggs you supplied.You will not find any, but will find capped worker brood in a week

Thanks iddee for you knowledge ???..there is a queen in the hive and it is not a laying worker bee. The frame I had installed had capped brood and was filled out the rest of the way with eggs and larva. Both frames on either side of the one I put in had eggs a larva also. I stopped my inspection there and closed it back up.
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: iddee on May 21, 2019, 02:02:26 PM
 :cheesy: :cheesy: :cheesy:
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: van from Arkansas on May 21, 2019, 04:23:46 PM
ID, you got me on this one.  Mark one up for ya.  How come you don?t rub it in, I was sure of a LW.  You are a real gentleman, ID.

Mr. Bill, thank you for the follow up post.

Blessings
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: iddee on May 21, 2019, 04:33:51 PM
Van, I come here to help, not harm. After 43 years of observance, sometimes I see things others don't see. Hopefully, you and a few others can review the pics and see what I saw.
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: Donovan J on May 21, 2019, 04:52:17 PM
If your going to fix this laying worker problem, put the frames in a 5 frame nuc and put it on top of another 5 frame nuc. Put newspaper in between the two and introduce a queen to the bottom nuc. The bees will meet at the middle and chew through the paper and the laying worker pheromone should be over powered by the queens brood.
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: iddee on May 21, 2019, 05:58:12 PM
Xerox, the only way to fix this LW problem is to marry her to a king bee so she will be a queen bee.   :wink: :cheesy: :cheesy: :cheesy: :cheesy: :cheesy:

I think you need to go back and read the whole thread.
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: van from Arkansas on May 21, 2019, 06:24:51 PM
Quote from: iddee on May 21, 2019, 04:33:51 PM
Van, I come here to help, not harm. After 43 years of observance, sometimes I see things others don't see. Hopefully, you and a few others can review the pics and see what I saw.

Ok, ID, I reviewed the pic closely, very closely:  the size of the eggs, not the number of eggs per cell, rather the size of the eggs is what you saw also all eggs on bottom, none on the sides, not one.

Sharp eye, one for detail you have, ID.
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: iddee on May 21, 2019, 06:51:31 PM
Also, number of cells with only one egg, and number of single eggs standing, not laying down, in the bottom center of cell.
A queen may lay more than one egg and a few may lay down, but a LW will NEVER put 50 eggs upright in single egg cells in a tight pattern.
The one "never" tells the story.
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: Donovan J on May 21, 2019, 07:59:50 PM
Quote from: iddee on May 21, 2019, 05:58:12 PM
Xerox, the only way to fix this LW problem is to marry her to a king bee so she will be a queen bee.   :wink: :cheesy: :cheesy: :cheesy: :cheesy: :cheesy:

I think you need to go back and read the whole thread.

Sorry didnt see the second page  :cheesy: the workers will remove the extra eggs
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: iddee on May 21, 2019, 10:18:20 PM
Now you got it.  :cheesy:
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: Fishing-Nut on May 23, 2019, 08:21:00 PM
Neat thread. Good info here. Thanks to all.
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: billdean on May 25, 2019, 11:46:02 PM
A new development with this hive! I was looking for a frame of brood for a split today and remember this hive had had some eggs a few days ago. I found a frame and when I was looking to see if the queen was on it I noticed the cells didn't look right. Pin holes in the capping and few cells had dead larva in them. So I took the frame in the house for closer inspection with a lighted magnifier and found up to 11 eggs in the upper row of cells by the top bar. Still multiple eggs and larva in the cells. The one dark frame, which is going on 4 years old, looked like maybe EFB. I will be sending it off to Beltsville to have it looked at.
I decide to look for the queen or queens. Didn't find one. The hive is 3 8 frame mediums. 6 to 7 frames of bees on each box. I went through each frame carefully. Nothing. So I decided to shake them all through an excluder into one box. No queens at all. I did find lots of eggs, larva, capped brood but no queen. I did find they where starting queen cells again! Enough! Tomorrow I will shake this hive out in the yard and let them find their way into other hives. The old hives and frames I will stack out of the way and protected until I hear from Beltsville. I will attached some pictures when I can figure out how to again
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: billdean on May 26, 2019, 12:13:21 AM
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Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: billdean on May 26, 2019, 12:45:32 AM
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Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: Oldbeavo on May 26, 2019, 06:50:33 AM
Not sure about EFB, but a couple look like early chalk brood. EFB would be discoloured coffee color. maybe doesn't show in the photo,
If there was not a queen some where, how do you get normal capped brood, should it not be domed drone brood from a laying worker?
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: BeeMaster2 on May 26, 2019, 07:14:58 AM
Billdean, has been the
If you suspect European Foul Brood, do a tooth pick test on one of the discolored larvae. Stick it in the larvae, spin it around and slowly pull it out. EFB will have a string that stretches across 2 cells. AFB stretches across 4 cells.
I agree with oldbeavo, I do not think you have a laying worker. I suspect your queen is failing and they are trying to replace her again. Bees do not make queen cells from laying worker eggs.
It is possible but very rare. I would not shake this hive out. A better choice would bee to buy a mated queen.
Jim Altmiller
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: iddee on May 26, 2019, 07:31:22 AM
Have you done a mite count?
Do you, or did you, have an excluder on this hive?
It could be both a queen and LW's if the excluder was used.
It could be excessive mites and the bees are hygienic.
That is 2 of several possibilities, so I'm not saying it's one of them. Just a couple things to check.
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: billdean on May 26, 2019, 11:04:02 AM
Yes on the mite count. No mite. I have done several OAV treatments that starter before they brooded up.

I had an excluder on this hive early on but took it off weeks before.

There is no queen now but it is obvious that there was one. This is the 3rd queen that has been killed.

Not sure what hygienic is?

It could be chalk brood. I did not see any roping but I did see watery brood and a few dead brood in a couple of spots. It has no chalky appearance.

I have counted up to 11 eggs in one cell.

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Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: billdean on May 26, 2019, 11:07:17 AM
Better pic. I hope
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: iddee on May 26, 2019, 01:21:15 PM
That is laying workers. They started when the excluder was on. If the new queen and worker brood didn't stop them, then shaking out is the way I would go.
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: Oldbeavo on May 26, 2019, 05:56:28 PM
Before it goes to total chalk there is a small discoloured spot on the larvae, that is the start of the chalk brood.
Do you have access to queen cells from a queen breeder, adding a cell that is ready to hatch may work as the bees will treat it as a supersedure and accept the new queen.
Title: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: TheHoneyPump on May 26, 2019, 06:13:59 PM
Post #5 and #12
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: jtcmedic on May 26, 2019, 07:40:15 PM
I recently had a older queen started doing this, almost like she had a plug and then multi eggs like this, I think she was laying blanks and culled her, new queen and it?s back on track.I too thought laying worker but like stated before it was in the bottom and then found the queen and watched her drop a couple eggs in one cell.
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: billdean on May 27, 2019, 12:06:26 AM
Quote from: TheHoneyPump on May 26, 2019, 06:13:59 PM
Post #5 and #12

Thank you Pump?..I did see those posts. I have shaken the bees out of that hive and dismantle it. They ended up in the hive next to it.  Hopefully the laying worker bees don't start up there and try to kill that queen!
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: Ben Framed on May 27, 2019, 12:31:44 AM
Quote from: billdean on May 27, 2019, 12:06:26 AM
Quote from: TheHoneyPump on May 26, 2019, 06:13:59 PM
Post #5 and #12

Thank you Pump?..I did see those posts. I have shaken the bees out of that hive and dismantle it. They ended up in the hive next to it.  Hopefully the laying worker bees don't start up there and try to kill that queen!

I hope it all works out for you Bill. Let us know how it all works out. This post has been very educational and I look forward to learning even more. In the mean time, Tell me about your dog in the picture.
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: billdean on May 27, 2019, 01:55:24 PM


I hope it all works out for you Bill. Let us know how it all works out. This post has been very educational and I look forward to learning even more. In the mean time, Tell me about your dog in the picture.
[/quote

The dog is Taffy. She is a 13 year old Border Collie. She is my first love! The bees are my second.
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: Ben Framed on May 29, 2019, 11:03:07 PM
Quote from: billdean on May 27, 2019, 01:55:24 PM


I hope it all works out for you Bill. Let us know how it all works out. This post has been very educational and I look forward to learning even more. In the mean time, Tell me about your dog in the picture.
[/quote

The dog is Taffy. She is a 13 year old Border Collie. She is my first love! The bees are my second.

I thought so, I have a male 10 years d Named Happy
Title: Re: laying worker or Immature queen
Post by: Ben Framed on November 13, 2022, 11:01:58 AM
Still have your dog Bill?

Phillip