Honey bees develop in four distinct life cycle phases: egg, larva, pupa,
and adult. The total development time varies a bit among the three
castes of bees, but the basic miraculous process is the same: 24 days
for drones, 21 days for worker bees, and 16 days for queens.
Honey bees as eggs
The honey bee metamorphosis begins when the queen lays an egg. You
should know how to spot eggs, because that is one of the most basic and
important skills you need to develop as a beekeeper. It isn’t an easy
task, because the eggs are mighty tiny (only about 1.7 millimeters
long). But finding eggs is one of the surest ways to confirm that your
queen is alive and well. It’s a skill you’ll use just about every time
you visit your hive.
The queen lays a single egg in each cell that has been cleaned and
prepared by the workers to raise new brood. The cell must be spotless,
or she moves on to another one.
If she chooses a standard worker-size cell, she releases a fertilized
egg into the cell. That egg develops into a worker bee (female). But if
she chooses a wider drone-size cell, the queen releases a nonfertilized
egg. That egg develops into a drone bee (male). The workers that build
the cells are the ones that regulate the ratio of female worker bees to
male drone bees. They do this by building smaller cells for female
worker bees, and larger cells for male drone bees.
The queen positions the egg in an upright position (standing on end) at
the bottom of a cell. That’s why they’re so hard to see. When you look
straight down into the cell, you’re looking at the miniscule diameter of
the egg, which is only 0.4 of a millimeter wide.
Larva stage of a honey bee’s life
Three days after the queen lays the egg, it hatches into a larva (the
plural is larvae). Healthy larvae are snowy white and resemble small
grubs curled up in the cells (see Figure 2-12). Tiny at first, the
larvae grow quickly, shedding their skin five times.
These helpless little creatures have voracious appetites, consuming
1,300 meals a day. The nurse bees first feed the larvae royal jelly, and
later they’re weaned to a mixture of honey and pollen (sometimes
referred to as bee bread). Within just five days, they are 1,570 times
larger than their original size. At this time the worker bees seal the
larvae in the cell with a porous capping of tan beeswax. Once sealed in,
the larvae spin a cocoon around their bodies.
The bee as a pupa
The larva is now officially a pupa (the plural is pupae). Here’s where
things really begin to happen. Of course the transformations now taking
place are hidden from sight under the wax cappings. But if you could,
you’d see that this little creature is beginning to take on the familiar
features of an adult bee. The eyes, legs, and wings take shape.
Coloration begins with the eyes: first pink, then purple, then black.
Finally, the fine hairs that cover the bee’s body develop. After 12
days, the now adult bee chews her way through the wax capping to join
her sisters and brothers.
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