Beesource Beekeeping Forums banner

What is happening to these drones?

2K views 15 replies 9 participants last post by  Zbee 
#1 ·
Hi all,

I have observed over the last 3-4 days what appears to be aborting and ejecting of drones from one of my hives. Workers are pulling them out of the hive, some alive but not fully developed, and dumping. At first I thought a few casualties, but now think there is something more to it. Some of the bees are clearly not fully developed, while the rest are covered in fur (young).

I have heard bees will evict drones in the late fall before wintering, but these are very young and in some cases, aborted drones.

Is this hygienic behavior to verroa? Is it something else? Otherwise the hive is doing exceptionally well.

The picture was taken from casualties found on the ground outside the front of the hive.
 

Attachments

See less See more
1
#3 ·
I am running a screen capture for last couple days. I will pull it tonight and get a 24 hr level.

I am uncertain as to whether they have Deformed Wing Virus or was it more that they were removed from the cell early and had not developed their wings.
 
#5 ·
Ran a drop test of mites for 3 days. One of the days was a no fly day due to a massive rainstorm. Used Petroleum jelly on the screened bottom board insert.

22 mites total or ~7/day.

There are roughly 3 brood boxes and 2 honey supers (all 8 frame mediums) - or 24 medium frames of brood/bees and 12 medium frames of honey.

For this time of year, what would be a reasonable number to shoot for (other than zero) for this number of bees?
 
#10 ·
IMHO...

From everything I understand if you have natural drop of 5 to 7 mites in 24 hoursThe Hives heading for trouble. Personally I would be treatment now.
you also asked about drones the population will be going down this happens around the end of June where I live in Southwestern New Hampshire.


BEE HAPPY Jim 134 :)
 
#6 ·
I went and checked in front of the hive this evening when they quieted down - found another ~10 drones in similar condition. I also watched a worker jump on a drone that was moving slowly by the hive entrance (young one) and pull him by his wing and dump him over the edge.

I placed these drones in a jar for possible testing - no visible mites on them. Out of curiosity, I added a few drops of honey to the bottom of the jar and watched them suck it up pretty quickly. Maybe Wolfer is onto something and this is population control?
 
#9 ·
I will try a sugar roll tomorrow to get another data point. The hive was started from a packaged in April. With the natural brood cycle break from starting from a package, I had hoped I would ease into mite management.

Not jumping to conclusions yet, but just thinking of my options based on the sugar roll test.
 
#12 ·
I'm always one to support hard data. In this case, however, DWV is the killing virus, and the mites are its vector. If one sees the virus expressed at high levels (and multiple dead drones represent that), one does not need to delay --- the killing agent is epidemic. Modern virulent DWV is a Varroa-dependent agent (per elegant research in Hawaii), and treatment for Varroa may alter the course of the DWV spread.

The human metaphor -- If you see folks succumbing to bubonic plague, you do not need to census the rat population.

There is likely recovery time before winter, if the Varroa can be brought under control now. The DWV resolves with rapid response to Thymol/Formic and/or Oxalic. That level of DWV going into winter bee production dooms the hive.
 
#16 ·
Performed sugar roll test - 4 mites/300 bees, or 1.33%.

Method:
http://scientificbeekeeping.com/sick-bees-part-11-mite-monitoring-methods/
http://www.ent.uga.edu/bees/disorders/documents/VarroaMites_155.pdf)


With this data, I am not planning to treat. I look at treatments as a last resort. Although I am perplexed with the drones being culled like this, I do not want to overreact. I am not convinced what I am seeing is Deformed Wing Virus. Might it be hygienic behavior and bees pulled before their wings were developed?

I am considering a brood break come August with the introduction of a new Russian Queen to knock down the mite levels. This new queen has been in a NUC on top of the hive separated by a DSB for a couple weeks now and is laying eggs and doing rather well. With the brood break, I am planning a vigorous powder sugar treatment regiment.

I will also plan to do a drone brood trap/freeze if they decide to lay more drones in a drone frame.

Thank you all for your thoughts and suggestions. I really do appreciate the different perspectives. Notwithstanding what I see outside the hive (poor drones),it is one of my best hives in terms of production, volume of bees, temperament, etc.
 
This is an older thread, you may not receive a response, and could be reviving an old thread. Please consider creating a new thread.
Top