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Date: | Mon, 12 May 2008 00:17:02 EDT |
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In the early 1980s we conducted extensive tests of brood survival - marking
patches, recording initial content of each cell (e.g., egg, larvae by day of
age, pupae by day of age, nectar, pollen, or empty) and then re-examining 14
days later. We had to uncap pupae to determine age. We saw pupae that were
head down in cells - not often, but enough to note that it happened.
We didn't see these emerge - so we didn't know whether they would have
survived if they'd gone to term. So, Peter apparently saw some of these emerging
backwards. My question, in order to do this, did other bees open the cells?
Jerry
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