?capped drone photos?

Started by newguy, September 05, 2005, 10:37:00 AM

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newguy

im going away for two weeks, i need to show my wife a pic of capped drone larvae so she can tell me if i have a laying worker(see "multiple eggs" post). right now i just have young larvae, they should be capped in a few days. she says she will check them for me but has never done it before and has no idea what to look for. i tried to tell her what the differance was but she thinks she wont know the dif especially if there is only capped drones and she has never seen either. thanks kevin

Jerrymac

Sorry, don't have pictures. BUT....... Regular old brood and honey that is capped is basically flat. Drone cells capped would be all bumpy (domed cappings) Can't be mistaken for anything else.

Queen cells, big globs of wax that looks totally different from rest of comb.


Try that.
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Joseph Clemens


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Joseph Clemens
Beekeeping since 1964
10+ years in Tucson, Arizona
12+ hives and 15+ nucs
No chemicals -- no treatments of any kind, EVER.

newguy

Joseph - I know they're laying in worker cells but, will the capped drone from a laying worker look like a regular capped drone or will it look like a capped worker?

Jerrymac

It will have dome tops like other drone cells.
:rainbowflower:  Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.   :rainbowflower:

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Joseph Clemens

When the drones are being raised improperly in worker cells, they stand out even more than the usual drone brood does. The cells are enlarged, extended from the comb surface, and they have obvious bullet shaped cappings. Just like in the photo at the link I posted earlier.

<img src="http://banners.wunderground.com/weathersticker/miniWeather06_both/language/www/US/AZ/Marana.gif" border=0
alt="Click for Marana, Arizona Forecast" height=50 width=150>

Joseph Clemens
Beekeeping since 1964
10+ years in Tucson, Arizona
12+ hives and 15+ nucs
No chemicals -- no treatments of any kind, EVER.