Introduction to Beekeeping
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Introduction to Beekeeping. Session 7 - Swarming Sat 5 th / Sun 6 th April 2013. Introductions. Bob Needs 26 years experience Bee migration Queen rearing Morphometry B.I.B.B.A. member. Reasons for swarming. Natural means of colony reproduction Colony too crowded Unbalanced colony
Introduction to Beekeeping
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Presentation Transcript
Introduction to Beekeeping Session 7 - Swarming Sat 5th/Sun 6th April 2013
Introductions • Bob Needs • 26 years experience • Bee migration • Queen rearing • Morphometry • B.I.B.B.A. member
Reasons for swarming • Natural means of colony reproduction • Colony too crowded • Unbalanced colony • Queen getting old • Absconding
Preparation for Swarming • A week before actual event • Eggs in Queen cells • Queen cells sealed • Old Queen ready to fly off • Prime Swarm
Prime Swarm & Casts • Prime Swarm – half the workers • Casts – Virgin Queen plus progressively less workers • Viability of Casts ? • Viability of parent colony ?
Impact of swarming Colony swarms Foragers lost from parent colony Main nectar flow
Swarm Prevention • Regular Inspections - weekly • Young Queens < 2 years old • Room in brood space for Queen to lay • Room in super space for nectar to be stored • Know what to do when Queen cells are seen with eggs or larvae • Mark & clip Queen ensures any swarm returns to hive
Effect on Swarm of Clipped Queen • Swarm is not lost • Workers return to hive • Queen may return to hive • Beekeeper must still take action
Swarm Control • The Artificial Swarm • Many methods • Colony acts as if it has swarmed • Use of the Nucleus
Swarm ControlBasic Principles – (1) • Colony made up of 3 parts: • Queen • Brood • Flying bees
Swarm ControlBasic Principles – (2) • Swarm control involves separating one of the three parts from the other two: • Queen from Brood and Flying Bees • Brood from Queen and Flying Bees • Flying Bees from Queen and Brood
Stage 1 – Day 1 Artificial Swarm Method Examine all frames Remove all sealed Q Cells Leave 2 open Q Cells containing a grub Super Original Stand Q B A Flying Bees New box B Find Queen on a frame Check for and destroy all Queen Cells Move frame with Queen on to BOX B Fill BOX B with drawn and foundation frames
Stage 2 – Day 7 Artificial Swarm Method Q Cells now sealed Super Feeder Original Stand Q B A 0 0 Move BOX A to other side of BOX B New box B Examine all frames Remove all Q Cells
Stage 3 – Day 14 Artificial Swarm Method First VQ to emerge attempts to kills other VQs Super Feeder Original Stand B After a further week check for Q Cells A Q Do not open BOX A For 3 weeks Flying Bees from both Boxes A & B Strengthen foraging force Virgin Q flies out to mate
Swarm collection locations • Rest nearby • Trees, hedges, posts etc. • Scout bees look for home • Collective agreement • Fly off • Popular sites • Chimneys • Roof spaces • Compost buckets etc.
Swarm Collection • Obtain appropriate insurance • Obtain permission from the landowner • Ensure the public are kept away from the swarm • Retrieve the queen and the rest will follow • Move the bees into a box • Invert the box near the swarm • Wait for all the bees to join the queen • Take away and re-hive the swarm
Hiving a swarm • In front of hive • Directly into a box • Check for diseases • Feed after 2 days