Q&A for How to Identify a Queen Bee

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  • Question
    What is the difference between a queen bee and a normal bee?
    Steve Downs
    Live Bee Removal Specialist
    Steve Downs is a Live Honey Bee Removal Specialist, Honey bee Preservationist, and the Owner of Beecasso Live Bee Removal Inc, a licensed bee removal and relocation business based in the Los Angeles, California metro area. Steve has over 20 years of humane bee capturing and bee removal experience for both commercial and residential locations. Working with beekeepers, agriculturalists, and bee hobbyists, Steve sets up bee hives throughout the Los Angeles area and promotes the survival of bees. He has a passion for honeybee preservation and has created his own Beecasso sanctuary where rescued bee hives are relocated and preserved.
    Live Bee Removal Specialist
    Expert Answer
    In order to spot the queen, wait until the honeycomb frame is in full sunlight. When the bees come out to warm themselves, you should be able easily to identify the queen, because she'll be the largest bee in the bunch.
  • Question
    How does it know there friend of there own colony
    Community Answer
    Bees from the same colony emit the same pheromone, so they can tell by scent.
  • Question
    Why are there honey bees in my bird feeder?
    Carolyn Chadwick
    Community Answer
    I am not sure what your bird feeder looks like or what bird food it dispenses. Bees as well as nectar feeding birds will be attracted to a nectar feeder ( usually a suspended bottle with some kind of drinking trough attached to open end). As the nectar content drops, it is replaced by air. This is not a problem for a bird size creature. A bee is small enough to get caught into the air currents pulling it in through the bottle opening. Placing a netting like material between the trough and the rest of the bottle will prevent bees being pulled into the remaining solution in the bottle. The netting is provided by some nectar feeder manufacturers, otherwise a piece of stocking will do.
  • Question
    Do queen bees ever travel alone?
    Community Answer
    Generally no, unless they are forced out of their hive. Most queens who are rejected by their hive are killed.
  • Question
    I recently saw a swarm of bees numbering about 1,000 attached to a bush. Where would the queen bee be?
    Clifton Murphy
    Community Answer
    She would be right in the center of the mass. The swarm surrounds her for protection. Once the swarm determines a good home, it will lead her there.
  • Question
    Is dancing the only way bees communicate with each other, or are there multiple ways, like pheromones?
    Community Answer
    Yes dancing is one, normally to explain where the food source is and the distance/directions, as well is which is the better nesting site, and to communicate threats, but they communicate all the time with each other through pheromones, mainly inside the hive.
  • Question
    What do queen bees do?
    Community Answer
    Queen bees are basically the most-important bee in a hive; by laying thousands of eggs a day, she keeps the population of bees (and the production of honey) up for a more-successful hive. While all she does is lay eggs, she is the reason for a healthy hive. Attendant bees see to her every need, while drones are responsible for mating. The workers (also female) travel hundreds of miles to make honey. In short, every bee is needed for his/her part to maintain a hive.
  • Question
    What is the difference between a queen bee and a hornet?
    Community Answer
    The better question is probably what the difference is between a bee and a hornet, since they're two separate species. Hornets are a type of wasp: they aren't fuzzy, like bees are, and unlike bees they can sting people repeatedly. Hornets also have queens.
  • Question
    How can I tell if a queen bee lays eggs?
    Clifton Murphy
    Community Answer
    You need to pull hive frames out of the hive and inspect them. If you see a tiny white egg in the bottom of any cells, she is laying. Also, if you see capped brood cells, you have had a laying queen in the hive within the last 72 hours. Most often, if you see capped brood, there is a laying queen whether you can find her or not.
  • Question
    Does a queen bee have separate quarters?
    Community Answer
    Nope. She will simply roam around the hive laying eggs wherever she finds space. However, she usually tends to be towards the bottom and center of a hive.
  • Question
    Who does the queen bee mate with?
    Venus
    Community Answer
    The queen bee mates with drones. They have only one job: to mate with the queen.
  • Question
    How can I tell if a queen been is mated from looking at her?
    Clifton Murphy
    Community Answer
    While queen size can vary because of genetics, a mated queen typically is larger than a virgin. Determining the difference takes some experience, and the natural variation can make this a difficult task. The best way to determine if you have a mated queen is to inspect the hive frames. If there are tiny white eggs in the bottom of comb cells, or there are capped brood cells, then you have a mated queen.
  • Question
    I have a bee going in my bird box. The bee is the size of a golf ball! Could this be a queen?
    Community Answer
    Most likely not, as the queen does not leave the hive since the workers do all of the work. It could be a foreign breed of bee that traveled from another country because of warmer weather, or possibly be a wasp or hornet.
  • Question
    I have a hive that has not been harvested in 2 1/2 years, and some parts of the honeycomb are black. Are the black parts bad?
    Community Answer
    The black comes from the leftover color of old cocoons spun by bee larvae before they change into bees that we would recognize. When the queen has finished laying in that particular brood area, the bees will often fill those hatched cells with honey after they have cleaned them. It is perfectly safe to harvest honey from these combs via centrifugal extraction or the crush and strain technique. The wax would not be fit for "comb honey" due to its stiffness.
  • Question
    Does the queen bee lay eggs so they can be a servant to her when they hatch?
    Community Answer
    The structure of a hive of insects is very different than a community of people or other animals. There are some descriptions of hive colonies which make the queen out to be more of a baby-making-hostage, while others will portray her as the ruler of the hive. While from our perspective it may seem that the bees work as servants to the queen, there is actually a more mutual exchange going on. In an established hive, the queen bee will be the mother of all hive members - which means that all the members of the hive are sisters. This creates a massive incentive for them to work together to survive and help their mother (the queen) to continue to expand their family.
  • Question
    I have large bumblebees under/inside concrete steps, and in my houseplants. They are big and furry, with a golden circle on their backs. What are they and how can I get rid of them?
    Clifton Murphy
    Community Answer
    The bumblebee "Bombus Impatiens" are non-aggressive and the species is easy to identify. They have a furry abdomen with 1-4 yellow stripes. Bumble bees nest in holes in the ground, under stairs and inside concrete steps or anywhere else they can find shade and be left relatively alone. The Carpenter bee is a much different animal. They are territorial and will protect their hive from all intruders, including you. They lack yellow stripes, instead having a solid yellow midsection with a black dot in the center of the back and only nest in wood they have burrowed into. Both are pollinators helping your garden. If they are causing issues, get an exterminator.
  • Question
    How long does it take an egg to hatch?
    Community Answer
    If its a queen, it will hatch in about 15 days. Drones will hatch in about 20, and workers in about 25 days.
  • Question
    Do they like honey?
    Clifton Murphy
    Community Answer
    Of the species of bees that actually produce honey, not all do; it is produced as a means to store nectar (their source of sugar) for the winter, so it is part of their diet. Bees use a special organ called the "honey crop" to store this nectar while foraging and to process nectar into honey for storage. They also use honey to make wax. It takes about eight (8) pounds of honey to produce one (1) pound of wax! Bees will readily consume honey left out for them, so yes, they must like it.
  • Question
    How many years will the queen bee survive?
    Clifton Murphy
    Community Answer
    This varies greatly by species and is not easily answered without knowing which species we are talking about. If we are talking about Apis Mellifera (honey bees) then they will live up to five (5) years in the wild. However, in a natural hive, the worker bees will kill her as soon as her laying productivity begins to diminish, so there are a lot of variables as to how long she will live. Genetics play a vital role. If she lays strong, her sisters, the workers will keep her around until she no longer does so. At this point, the workers will raise a new queen and eject the old queen from the hive or kill her by forming a ball around her, causing her to overheat and die.
  • Question
    Do queen bees go out of the hive?
    Community Answer
    Yes, but not often. She may leave the hive for her first mating, if there's a major disturbance, or if the hive has grown too large for her to maintain.
  • Question
    How do I attract a queen bee?
    Community Answer
    It's difficult to do in the wild since queens rarely leave the hive. You can order queens from apiaries or artificially introduce a queen from another hive to yours.
  • Question
    How do I get rid of the bees
    Community Answer
    Calling an exterminator is your best bet, since you can become injured trying to take down a hive yourself.
  • Question
    I found blue fluff stuffed inside some log rolls in my garden, and there was a maggot like thing inside and little bees came out. What should I do?
    Community Answer
    If it doesn't bother you, you can leave it alone. If you don't want it there, call an exterminator to make sure it isn't part of a bigger problem.
  • Question
    How do I tell if a bee is female or male?
    Community Answer
    One easy way is to look at their antennae. Male bees have long, curved antennae, while females have shorter antennae that bend at sharper angles.
  • Question
    How do I trap a queen bee?
    Community Answer
    If you have a beekeeping suit, you can usually just pick up the queen. Don't try to do this in the wild or without protective gear. The other bees may swarm you.
  • Question
    What does a capped brook look like?
    Clifton Murphy
    Community Answer
    Capped brood cells are cells in the hive which have been covered with a thin wax membrane. This membrane will be flush with the surface of the comb if it contains worker brood, and slightly domed and puckered like a golf ball and it contains a drone brood. If you see a cell which has been drawn long (greater than 1/4 inch) then it is a queen cell and the hive is either preparing to swarm, or they are replacing a dead or unproductive queen. If they are located on the bottom of frames they are swarm cells. On the face of a frame, they are called "supersedure cells" and are used in emergencies such as to replace an old queen or if the beekeeper kills her.
  • Question
    How does one queen bee kill another queen?
    Community Answer
    Queen bees have stingers that let them sting over and over again without dying, unlike other bees. So queens killing other queens will sting them to death.
  • Question
    What is a capped brood cell?
    Community Answer
    Those are the white and black striped. You will find them easily in the dark.
  • Question
    How does a queen bee mate? How often does she mate?
    Community Answer
    A queen bee mates with a drone bee who can fly the highest during mating flight. She only mates once.
  • Question
    Why is there only one queen bee?
    Community Answer
    Only one queen bee is needed for a hive to operate successfully, so there is no reason for more than one.
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