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Improving soil and crop productivity in mountain agriculture
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Learn Mountain Agriculture with Rahul

The bee colony – various castes and their activities

A honey bee colony has three castes

(i) Queen – only one; functional female

(ii) Workers – 20,000-30,000, sterile females

(iii) Drones – a few only, functional males available prior to swarming.

 

 

Queen bee

  • Perfectly developed female with complete reproductive system.
  • Largest in size.
  • Wings are small and shrivelled.
  • Mouth parts are used for sucking food is shorter than that of workers.
  • No wax glands.
  • It lives for about 3 – 4 years. It may lay eggs at the rate of 800 – 1500 per day.
  • Lays two types of eggs:

1) Fertilized – eggs that produce females (either sterile workers or fertile females (new queens).

2) Unfertilized – eggs which produce drones.

 

 

Worker bee

  • Imperfectly developed females.
  • smaller than the queen.
  • have strong wings to fly.
  • These have a large and efficient proboscis (mouth parts packed together like a thin tube)
  • for sucking nectar.
  • A well-developed sting is present. Hind legs have “pollen basket” for collecting pollen.
  • The workers have a life span of about 35 days.
  • The different duties which they perform agewise are as follows:

Day 1-14 Activity inside the hive such as cleaning the hive, feeding the larvae, etc.

Day 14-20 Guard duties at entrance to the hive

Day 21- 35 Foraging, i.e. collecting the food (nectar and pollen from the surroundings)

 

Drones

  • Are the male bees produced from unfertilized eggs.
  • Their production in the hive synchronizes with the production of the new (virgin) queens.
  • At the age of 14-18 days the drones perform mating flight chasing the virgin queen in the air.
  • Drones can live up to about 60 days, although they are stung and killed after the mating.
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