Hi all,
Whilst watching bees in an observation hive, I've seen various
aspects of their behaviour which are new to me, or which I now
understand better, however there are a couple of thing that still
puzzle me. Maybe someone else has some thoughts.
When building comb, the bees hang in 'chains' from the
thin strip of foundation I gave them. Clearly this helps
them get their comb vertical and therefore stable.
However, from time to time, bees drop from this chain to
the floor where they gradually pile up in a heap of
apparent 'corpses'. They're not dead, but if it's
exhaustion, it's pretty profound -- they lay there
motionless and looking physically flat. They manage to
hang together ok when they for a swarm -- what's
different here? (it could be hotter!).
I see a number of apparent squables between two or three
bees, where one seems to be the subject of abuse, the
others climbing all over it, apparently pulling it about,
biting it and attempting to sting it. Close (eyeball)
inspection shows that whilst the bees are curled up as
though trying to sting, the sting is not exposed or used
and the pulling and biting, whilst appearing to be
disturbing to the 'victim' doesn't appear to result in
any damage or serious retribution. Is this some kind of
cleaning behaviour perhaps?
Best regards,
--
Gordon Scott [log in to unmask] CompuServe 100332,3310
[log in to unmask] CompuServe 100070,413
Beekeeper; Kendo 3rd Dan; Sometime sailor.
The Basingstoke Beekeeper (newsletter) [log in to unmask]
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