confused. hive keeps rejecting queens.

Started by derrick1p1, June 23, 2008, 11:56:23 AM

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derrick1p1

Hello All:
Hive #1 was a nuc earlier this spring.  The original queen was rejected (may have swarmed though).  They reared a queen, she mated and started laying well. 

They then started rearing emergencies cells couple of weeks later.  They reared new cells, but after a couple of weeks of no eggs, I introduced a new queen.  They accepted her and she started laying. 

I checked one week later, could not find queen.  Eggs present, but also 2 emergency cells, almost capped.  Searched for queen, but didn't find her.  I will look again, but pretty sure she is gone as I'm getting fairly good at finding her when needed.

Any suggestions as to what may be going on?  I will leave this hive alone and let them rear the emergency cells as they obviously need them.  But wonder what could be going on.  I'm not treating this hive differently from the others, location/conditions are the same.  confusing!



I won't let grass grow under my feet, there will be plenty of time to push up daisies.

John Jones

Using Honey B Healthy� to feed and/or treat honey bees -

We add 1 teaspoonful of HBH (ca 5 ml) to a quart of 1:1 sugar syrup in order to stimulate brood rearing, pollen collection and to initiate early spring development in honey bee colonies. We start feeding in mid-February and continue until the bees have nectar coming in and they begin to stop feeding on the HBH.
We add 2 teaspoonfuls of HBH (ca 10 ml) to a quart of 1:1 sugar syrup in order to improve the health of the colony, in casees of dysentery, PMS, chalk brood or other ailments. The stronger dose of spearmint and lemongrass oils seems to give the honey bee brood and adults greater tolerance or resistance to the ailments.
We add 4 teaspoonfuls of HBH (ca 20 ml) to a quart of 1:1 sugar syrup when we introduce queens, treat with formic acid or cause other disruptive disturbances to the hive. This is particularly useful for queen introduction (especially for queens with low genetic relationship as Russian Queens) and for reducing defensive behavior in particularly defensive colonies. We shake or spray syrup onto the brood frames and onto the queen cage before releasing the queen. We seldom lose queens when this method is used.
We apply some of the HBH syrup to our skin in order to reduce stinging behavior; when the tarsi touch the HBH, the bees fly off instead of stinging.
We add about 20% of HBH to 85-100 ml of 50% formic acid during fumigation of brood chambers for varroa and tracheal mite control.
We apply the stronger syrups to two colonies when combining them, in order to reduce defensive behavior of the workers.

from West Virginia University bee lab pages.

John Jones
Stone Mountain, Ga.
John Jones
Stone Mountain, Georgia

Brian D. Bray

Quote from: derrick1p1 on June 23, 2008, 11:56:23 AM
Hello All:
Hive #1 was a nuc earlier this spring.  The original queen was rejected (may have swarmed though).  They reared a queen, she mated and started laying well. 

There may have been a lose queen in the package so the one in the cage was killed.

QuoteThey then started rearing emergencies cells couple of weeks later.  They reared new cells, but after a couple of weeks of no eggs, I introduced a new queen.  They accepted her and she started laying. 

Then bees were either not happy with the queen or she was killed during inspection.

QuoteI checked one week later, could not find queen.  Eggs present, but also 2 emergency cells, almost capped.  Searched for queen, but didn't find her.  I will look again, but pretty sure she is gone as I'm getting fairly good at finding her when needed.

They selected the best egg candidates as possible queens, if either turns out unsatisfactory the cycle will probably be repeated.

QuoteAny suggestions as to what may be going on?  I will leave this hive alone and let them rear the emergency cells as they obviously need them.  But wonder what could be going on.  I'm not treating this hive differently from the others, location/conditions are the same.  confusing!

Reinforce the population by putting in a frame of brood from one of your other hives and to see if they build more queen cells.  More queen cells would be emergency and indicate they were not happy with the emergency queens already started.
BTW, when buying queens, find out from the queen supplier if he uses chemicals (Apistan, Mite-away, etc) in his operation.  If he does you can probably bet that any queen you get from him will be rejected or superceded quickly.  There is growing evidence that mite control chemicals, along with the host of others the bees are subjected to, has a detrimental effect on queens.


Life is a school.  What have you learned?   :brian:      The greatest danger to our society is apathy, vote in every election!

Cindi

The eggs in the hive means that the queen was present at least recently, three days prior.  If you don't find her, she is probably just hiding well.  I am amazed at how many times I can't find the queen, and then go through frames again and find her.  The almost capped queen cells, thing is, did they have an egg inside them?  Perhaps they were just practice queen cells.  My bees always make queen cups, and then those are gone next time I look.  Just my two cents on things that I see.  Beautiful and most wonderful day, lovin' life. Cindi
There are strange things done in the midnight sun by the men who moil for gold.  The Arctic trails have their secret tales that would make your blood run cold.  The Northern Lights have seen queer sights, but the queerest they ever did see, what the night on the marge of Lake Lebarge, I cremated Sam McGee.  Robert Service

Michael Bush

A hive that keeps killing queens, probably has one or it has laying workers.  The best solution is always just a frame of open brood.  That way they can start a queen if needed but you haven't killed a perfectly good queen.  If they have laying workers you may need to repeat this every week for three weeks.  But after that it should straighten out.
My website:  bushfarms.com/bees.htm en espanol: bushfarms.com/es_bees.htm  auf deutsche: bushfarms.com/de_bees.htm  em portugues:  bushfarms.com/pt_bees.htm
My book:  ThePracticalBeekeeper.com
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