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Hive die outs

11K views 25 replies 16 participants last post by  HarryVanderpool 
#1 ·
Talking to a fellow commercial beek today and he asked if I was having any problems with my hives. He stated that he was having a higher then usual die out of hives from being queenless. The problem seems to be that if the queen dies, instead of building queen cells for new queens the bees are just dying off and not building queen cells. We are wondering if there is some genetic strain that has gotten into the bees that prevents this, maybe some anti-swarming genetic that someone was playing around with. Anyone else experiencing this? The majority of the queens are Kona but it could be anything. Also to note, there is not any unusual AFB or EFB going on and the hives that are not losing queens are exceptionally strong this year....never an easy answer.
 
#2 ·
Anyone else experiencing this? The majority of the queens are Kona but it could be anything.
Ya every year at this time. Also note, nothing wrong with Kona.

This month, I'm going around with a queen bank checking & requeening hives on the whole outfit. About the last five years or so been doing this and it keeps your winter loss rate down.

Next month pollen sub.
 
#4 ·
No, nothing wrong with Kona queens, most are strong and they get are good about filling very large orders in the spring so I have nothing bad to say about them. I just put that out there in case anyone else getting the majority of their queens from them were seeing the same thing.
 
#5 ·
I have been seeing more queen problems the last two years since the CCD stuff started. Swarms going queenless, hives going queenless.
 
#6 ·
alpha 6 writes:
We are wondering if there is some genetic strain that has gotten into the bees that prevents this

tecumseh replies: well I am by self description a serious sideline (not commercial) but this observation was made some years ago (sometime around the mid 1980's) when I worked for a commercial concern.

at that time I was rearing a goodly number of queen cells and I observed that some hives just didn't ever seem to get around to rearing emergency queen cell. there never really seemed to be any signifcant shortage of pollen or stores in these hives when you would break them apart. it just 'seemed' that they had forgotton how do do this essential task.
 
#8 ·
"Still finding queenless hives that made 60+ pounds of honey."

With no brood to look after, you should expect these hives to make honey. Have you had any problem with swarming from these hives? Requeening every year might help some. What are you finding for a hive population, strong, weak, or marginal? Could robbing be a problem?
 
#11 ·
high rate of speed writes:
Seems like anymore an outfit has to make up 40-50% more increase to come out even on their hive count for the following year.

tecumseh replies: I don't really move my bees much, but if I did I would suspect your numbers would be about right.
 
#14 ·
Queens

We started using California queens 2 seasons ago and we are seeing way more supercedure and queenlessness than what we saw when we used Hawaii queens (either Kona or Big Island). I 'm kinda thinking not enough drones at mating time for the supercedure ones. The queenless ones not really sure.

Jean-Marc
 
#15 ·
Losing queens

If I had never heard of CCD, and was just looking at my bees with an open mind, I would say I am having some queen problems. To me this is normal, something I've been dealing with forever. If you're not getting after those no.2s all year, you're going to be picking up X % in the fall. 40-50% rebuild every year if I want to stay even. Sometimes I think all there is to having "good bees" is constantly cull out the "bad bees". Doesn't seem to have anything to do with the breeders.
 
#16 ·
I've seen this with every swarm and every removal I've hived, including several that I gave away to other beekeepers who wanted a swarm or
cutout.

Never had such a high percentage of this.

How much brood do these colonies have?
Sealed? Open? What stage of development?

But by "this" I don't mean mere supercedure or queenlessness, but
the LACK of an emergency replacement, or supercedure cell.

To me, this means that the queen had to somehow have stopped
laying before she died or showed noticeable signs of needing to be
replaced. There simply were not eggs of appropriate age to use.

...and if you give a swarm to another fellow and it goes queenless,
do you then "owe" him a queen? I'm just sayin'... :)
 
#17 ·
Queen for a day.

Thats what I am seeing also as I pull honey.
ONE hive actually looked and acted queenless. Stingy, running, roaring, no brood, no eggs, etc...
But the others:
You open the hive, no brood, no eggs, no queen, no virgin, no cells, no torn-down cells, just calm quiet contented looking bees walking around on pollen bound comb.
Fairly good populations.
There you are with a frame in your hands saying, "Oh come on! There just has to be a queen in here somewhere; they're way to quiet!"
Newp!
And what is amazing, is how they bounce back with a new queen.
A month later, you would never know anything ever happened.

Right now, we are making up winter nucs.
Unfortunatly, some of them get used prior to winter when queens are no longer available.
So I am getting close to filling all of the nuc boxes.
They sure are a salvation in California almond season!
 
#19 · (Edited)
#20 ·
I'm sure the lack of correct age eggs play's some part in not getting emergency queens made back,but I personally feel it's been bred out of the bees.
For the last 30 years,queen breeders (and beekeepers) have viewed swarming as evil,and breeders have advertised and selected for low swarming.
Swarming and an emergency cells are two different functions,but I think the making of a queen cell for whatever reason has been altered in the bees genes. A swarming hive is a vigorous hive ,when you start taking out vigor you start altering your future bees, and the instincts which have kept bees alive for ever,in my opinion.
I'm sure others will not agree, but something has changed in that bees for the large part won't and don't make emergency cells like the did 20 or 30 years ago.
And for the unofficial pole on queens ,I have no problem with Kona queens,any different than any of the others.
 
#22 ·
"Swarming and an emergency cells are two different functions,but I think the making of a queen cell for whatever reason has been altered in the bees genes. A swarming hive is a vigorous hive ,when you start taking out vigor you start altering your future bees, and the instincts which have kept bees alive for ever,in my opinion."

I guess that would depend on what variety of bee your talking about. I know that swarming hasn't been bred out of the Russian's, and NWC's still seem to swarm fairly often.:)
 
#23 ·
I know that swarming hasn't been bred out of the Russian's, and NWC's .....:)
Yeah, where are these bees that don't swarm? I wanna get some of them. Our Italians swarm for no good reason other than it's spring. And yes, we have noticed a larger percentage of colonies that fail to requeen themselves after swarming. Also a larger percentage of caught swarms that go queenless after hiving.
Sheri
 
#26 ·
If you recieved 100 bad queens, something happened in shipping.
It is always possible to get a few bad queens in a box, but the entire lot?
It happens. Shipping is to blame.
I know of a breeder that sends out a battery box with a data logger inside occasionally to his customers. The customer just sends it back and then the data is analysed.
Once in a while, the temperature extremes are quite shocking.
Anyway, the queens that I have got in march from KONA have been excellent over the last few years. Gus really made the difference.
 
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