"but we're about to head into a dearth, and the remaining
(all-adult) population, which is numerous right now, is about to
start aging out. "
In my experience queenless bees do not age very fast at all. I had a queenless hive last six months last year. I think the thing that finally killed that nuc was getting robbed out. When bees are not raising brood they just do not seem to age at the normal rate. I think your main concern is to keep them from going laying worker which in general happens after they have been broodless for about a month. If they have laying workers introducing a queen is real hard because they behave like they already have a queen. Giving a frame of eggs and open brood once a week and carefully removing all emergency queen cells can keep them from going laying worker forever.
I think it is also possible you will have a new queen laying in the next few days. I think based on what you said that is has been 28 or 29 days since the split. If so you still have a few days left to be positive the hive really is queenless. Is it possible a new queen is laying right now and you missed seeing the eggs? That is easy to do. I have done it more than once.
Dick
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