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Swarming, Nutrition & Splits Extension/Research Apiculturist Department Biochemistry, Molecular Biology, Entomology & Plant Pathology Mississippi State University, MS 39762 Jeff Harris Mississippi Agricultural & Forestry Experiment Station
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Types of Swarming Reproductive swarms (primary) Afterswarms (secondary) Absconding swarms
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Reproductive Swarms Seasonal – most active months are May and June Usually the swarm consists of old queen and about 60% of the original nest bees Most workers in this type of swarm are very young (ca. 10-14 days old)
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Reproductive Swarms Left at the old nest site are between 12-25 queen cells About 40% of the original nest bees Usually these bees are old bees, many of which are foragers
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The function of primary swarms is reproduction by colony fission
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Not All Primary Swarms Survive Only 8-25% of primary swarms survived through the first season (cold climates) 45-78% of those swarms that survived the first season continue to survive for about 5 years
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Afterswarms Fairly uncommon, but in our area 1-2 afterswarms might issue from a colony per year Afterswarms usually contain a virgin queen, or recently mated queen Many queens can occur in an afterswarm Afterswarms are smaller than primary swarms and do not survive through a season in temperate climates
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Absconding Swarms Also called migration When nest site has become intolerable: 1. Chronically low abundance of food 2. Disease conditions 3. Insecticide poisoning
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Events of Swarming Rapid growth in amount of worker brood Crowding of the colony Queen cup construction Queen cell construction (10-15 days prior) Good weather Engorgement of Honey Exodus
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Causes of Swarming Dilution of queen pheromone Lack of space for queen to lay eggs Abundance of resources Genetic strain of bees Age of queen Environmental conditions
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Pre-Swarm Conditions
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Colony Growth
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Crowded with Good Nutrition
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Timing of Swarming New York: May-June, peaks in June Pennsylvania: May-June, peaks in late May Arkansas: April-May, peaks in early May Louisiana: March-May, peaks in April
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Colony Growth
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Number of Drones Reared
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Many Queen Cups weeks from swarming
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Getting Ready to Swarm Many queen cupsgo time, swarming in weeks Eggs in cupswill swarm in 8-10 days Capped cellsany moment Broodnest Time until Swarming
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Swarm Cells located on bottom of combs (easily seen by tilting back brood boxes)
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Emergency Queen Cells located anywhere, and they are usually shorter than swarm cells
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While In Flight Worker and queen pheromones hold the mass of bees together Appears wildly chaotic, but calms quickly on landing Bees assemble on a structure (bush, tree or building) within a few hundred yards of original nest site
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Finding the New Home 1. Scouts search out cavities 2. Scouts communicate cavity information using dances 3. Colony-wide debate 4. A choice is made (all dances are the same) 5. Chaotic exodus (again) 6. Land at new site
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Back at the Old Nest Site… Virgin queens emerge from cells Multiple virgins tolerate each other only for a brief period Queens do fight to the death on occasion, but workers often “ball” unwanted queens Virgin queens participate in afterswarms
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Queen cells being chewed down after a virgin queen has emerged
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It Already Swarmed! Open brood is presentrecent, 0-4 days Sealed but no open broodmore than 4-5 days No brood but there swarmed > 3 weeks, are remains of queen cellsnew queen not laying yet Multiple eggs in cells> 28 days ago, new queen failed, laying workers Broodnest Likely time of Swarm
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Preventing Swarming 1. Reversing hive bodies 2. Adding supers 3. Splits / nucs / increases 4. Shake nurse bees in front of weaker colony 5. Checker boarding
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Reversing Hive Bodies
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Checker boarding
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Timing of Splits or Nucs 1. Wrong time – waste of time, bees and money 2. Best time – mid-spring but before major honey flow 3. Good sign – 1 st drone flights and swarm season beginning 4. MUST have adequate food in all units that are budded or split from a hive General Rule: Earlier and Stronger Spilts Ensure Greater Success or Survival of Splits or Nucs
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Timing of Splits or Nucs 1. Earliest good pollen maples in Jan. 2. Begin feeding 50:50 syrup in Feb. – March 3. Add protein supplement if pollen becomes intermittent (start end of Jan. – March) 4. Must be prepared to split in March – April to avoid swarming
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Feeding Sucrose 33% Syrup: trickle; stimulates brood rearing 4.2 lbs. sucrose + 1 gallon water (makes 1.2 gallons syrup) 50% Syrup: spring feeding 8.3 lbs. sucrose + 1 gallon water (makes 1.6 gallons syrup) Thick Syrup (67%): autumn feeding 16.6 lbs. sucrose + 1 gallon water (makes 2.3 gallons syrup)
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Feeding Colonies Feeding Colonies (division board)
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Bee Bread Pollen + Microflora
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Commercial Protein Supplements Global Patties MegaBee BeePro Bee-Pol Feed-Bee
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Protein Supplements Place patties close to broodnest Feed a light syrup at the same time; helps stimulate brood rearing Be careful in cooler periods!
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Measures of Quality Increased brood production; colony growth Increased worker longevity Increased blood vitellogenin Boost in immune functions (e.g. pro- phenol oxidase)
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Timing of Splits or Nucs 1. The best colony size for splits is 2-3 deeps full of bees and brood 2. Splitting can be governed by availability of QUEENS 3. Bees will respond best to feeding during the natural period of spring build-up
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How much to Feed 1. 1-2 gallons of sugar syrup during 3-4 weeks prior to splitting 2. One third pollen patty every 2-4 days for the same period of time 3. Add empty combs to avoid becoming honey bound – delicate balance between growing and crowding!
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