Bob Livingston Apalachee Beekeeper’s Assn. Jan. 2012

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Presentation transcript:

Bob Livingston Apalachee Beekeeper’s Assn. Jan. 2012 Making Splits Bob Livingston Apalachee Beekeeper’s Assn. Jan. 2012

Terminology What is a: Colony Hive Parent Colony or hive Swarm Split

What is a colony of honeybees? A related group of honeybees containing one queen, drones and many workers that inhabit a structure with beeswax combs containing eggs, larvae, pupa, stored pollen and honey.

What is a “hive” of honeybees? A manmade structure for housing honeybees.

What is a “parent colony” The hive or colony that a split comes from.

What is a honey bee swarm? A natural division of the hive’s population Done to propagate the species The mechanism for the colony to reproduce itself. The normal response of a hive to success

What is a “split”? Dividing a single hive of honeybees into two or more smaller hives. “Swarming” is how a honeybee colony naturally reproduces. A “swarm” contains the old queen and 50% to 60% of bees from the parent colony who “split” off from the parent colony, move to a new a new location to begin a new colony.

Why should I make “splits” Most cost effective way to add additional hives each year. No need to buy packages/nucs Only cost is time, feed and maybe a new queen if you don’t raise your own Prevent swarming To produce nucs for sale to other beekeepers Good way to generate additional income Increase production

Why should I make splits 2 Raise Queens Establish mating nucs Introduce mature queen cells or virgin queens Virgin queens mate and start laying Remove mated queens to requeen your own hives or sale mated queens to others Repeat the process

When to do a “split” As soon as new commercial mated queens are available Or as soon as drones are flying if you want to raise your own queens With few colonies of your own or nearby you run the risk of not having an adequate numbers of drones available to mate with a virgin queen

Concepts of making splits Make sure both of the resulting colonies have a queen or the resources to make one Eggs or very young larvae just hatched from eggs Drones flying to mate with virgin queen Pollen and honey to feed both colonies Plenty of nurse bees in each hive to adequately care for the brood Respect the natural structure of the brood nest Brood combs belong together

How to do a “split” There are an infinite variety of ways to do a split depending on what you want for an outcome.

Types of splits Even split Cut down Split Swarm control split . Increase honey production Swarm control split

Even Split Take half of everything and divide it up between the parent hive and new hive

Walk away split Take One frame of eggs Two frames of emerging brood Two frames of pollen and honey Put in a 5 frame nuc box Shake in extra nurse bees Put the covers back on and walk away Come back in 4 weeks to see if the new queen is laying or Introduce a mated queen Introducing a mated queen will put the hive three weeks ahead of a hive raising their own queen

Cut down split Free up bees to forage by minimizing amount of brood and free up nurse bees to become foragers Move old queen and almost all open brood honey and pollen into a new hive (leave one frame containing eggs in parent hive) It will take parent hive 16 days to make a new queen from frame of eggs left in parent hive Parent hive won’t swarm because they are queenless and have minimal brood Split won’t swarm because they have no foragers. Foragers returned to parent hive Timing is critical Should be done shortly before the main nectar flow Especially good for production of comb or section honey (Ross Rounds)

Swarm Control Split Take old queen and frame she is on (should be eggs & larvae) one more frame of brood one frame of honey Two frames of drawn or new foundation Can do old queen & one frame of brood, one frame of pollen & honey and 3 frames of drawn comb/new foundation but will take longer to build out the nuc Put into a 5 frame nuc box Come back in 4 weeks to see if the new queen is laying or Introduce a mated queen into parent hive or make sure you leave at least one frame of eggs & young brood in parent hive so they can produce a new queen Introducing a mated queen will put the hive three weeks ahead of a hive raising their own queen Remove old queen and requeen nuc if planning to sell the nuc

Swarm Control Split continued Old queen and many bees and some stores gone from parent hive so parent hive thinks it has swarmed. Nuc has queen but minimal amounts of bees, brood and stores so they’re not strong enough to swarm

Frequently Asked Questions How early should I split Really depends on when commercial mated queens are available or adequate drones are flying to mate with virgin queens How many times can I split Very strong hives can be split 4 or 5 times per year but probable won’t make a honey crop Weak hives may stay too weak to split all year Should I move the splits or parent hives to another location Not entirely necessary but should consider moving the split(s) to a new location two or more miles away to prevent drifting and robbing.

Fla. Best Management Practices for Maintaining European Honey Bee Colonies Honey bee colony divisions or splits should be requeened with production queens or queens cells from European honey bee breeders following Florida best Management Practices. Beekeepers are discouraged from allowing colonies to produce their own queens Florida beekeepers should practice good swarm management techniques to prevent an abundance of virgin queens and their ready mating with available African honey bee drones that carry the defensive trait Recommend requeening every 6 months unless using marked or clipped queens and having possession a bill-of-sale from an European honey bee producer Immediately requeen with a European queen if previously installed marked or clipped queen is found missing Maintain one European drone source colony (250 sq.in. of drone comb) for every 10 colonies in order to reduce supercedure queens mating with African honey bee drones.

Splitting a Honey Bee Hive Elmore Herman, Millie Bee http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6FmnHHCftfU

Credits Michael Bush, Bush Bees David Burns, Long Lane Honey Farm http://www.bushfarms.com/bees.htm Author “The Practical Beekeeper Beekeeping Naturally” David Burns, Long Lane Honey Farm http://www.honeybeesonline.com/blesson15.html Elmore Herman, Millie Bee DOACS Bureau of Plant & Apiary Inspection http://www.freshfromflorida.com/pi/plantinsp/apiary/apiary.html