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Informed Discussion of Beekeeping Issues and Bee Biology

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Subject:
From:
Jerry Bromenshenk <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Informed Discussion of Beekeeping Issues and Bee Biology <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Thu, 20 Dec 2012 17:09:43 -0500
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In a message dated 12/20/2012 2:58:42 P.M. Mountain Standard Time,
[log in to unmask] writes:

We know  that it is true of A.m.m.  The queens generally go into their
third
or fourth year (sometimes fifth) and the workers live longer thus giving
large crops from small populations (the extra lifespan is all extra
foraging
time).

I'd like to see a reference for this claim.  We did work some years  ago on
modeling honey bee population dynamics and longevity.  The available
literature indicated that bees had a 'flight life' or more or less a fixed
number of kilometers that they could/would fly before they wore themselves out
and perished.  For modeling, this worked out to looking at things like
weather and life-span.  In peak summer foraging, where every day was sunny  and
warm, bees would 'use' up their flight life in about 11 days.  That's  what
the research from Germany showed.  The researcher marked bees, flew  them to
feeding stations at different distance, tracked life-span against  distance
flown.  This data seemed to work here in US as well, based on our  own
tests.  And, I went into a lot of published studies on bee life-span,  where the
authors didn't know about the German testing, and the average  life-span
under good flight conditions more or less proved out.

In spring or fall, where one might have a good flight day, 2-3 days  of
wet or cool, then one or more good flight days - the 'life-span' as we
modeled it, worked out to when the bees used up the cumulative number of hours
equivalent to the 11 day benchmark.  It certainly seemed to work in our  model
validations.  Not exact, but far better than I'd have  guessed.

So, my impression is that worker life-span is more a function of external
factors like weather, forage availability, nutritional quantity and
quality.  I'd find it hard to separate out a genetic difference.   Jerry

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