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<p align="justify">Queens lay an egg for each cell. Their yolk serves as food source until, three days later, a larva emerges. On the fourth and fifth day, larvae feed on royal jelly. On the sixth day, larvae transition from jelly to pollen and honey (bee bread), which they will feed on until the ninth day. Brood prepared to be queens are fed royal jelly (and not bee bread) until the ninth day. Larval cells are then capped with wax, where bees will develop as pupae until they emerge depending on their caste. Worker bees emerge on the 16th day, queen bees emerge the 21st and drones emerge last, on the 24th. | <p align="justify">Queens lay an egg for each cell. Their yolk serves as food source until, three days later, a larva emerges. On the fourth and fifth day, larvae feed on royal jelly. On the sixth day, larvae transition from jelly to pollen and honey (bee bread), which they will feed on until the ninth day. Brood prepared to be queens are fed royal jelly (and not bee bread) until the ninth day. Larval cells are then capped with wax, where bees will develop as pupae until they emerge depending on their caste. Worker bees emerge on the 16th day, queen bees emerge the 21st and drones emerge last, on the 24th. | ||
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<p align="justify"Workers assume different roles throughout their lives. During the first three weeks, they are called house bees and assume roles within the hive. Their first role is as cleaners, where they take care of debris and waste inside the hive. After three to five days, they assume a role as nurses, where they feed the larvae with royal jelly and bee bread. Afterwards, they assume a number of roles, from feeding the queen and ventilating the hive to making honey and becoming executioners and guards. Beginning between the 18th and 21st day, a worker will spend the remainder of its life as a field bee, where its jobs will be just as varied; they become scouts, nectar gatherers, water collectors and robbers. <sup>3</sup> | <p align="justify"Workers assume different roles throughout their lives. During the first three weeks, they are called house bees and assume roles within the hive. Their first role is as cleaners, where they take care of debris and waste inside the hive. After three to five days, they assume a role as nurses, where they feed the larvae with royal jelly and bee bread. Afterwards, they assume a number of roles, from feeding the queen and ventilating the hive to making honey and becoming executioners and guards. Beginning between the 18th and 21st day, a worker will spend the remainder of its life as a field bee, where its jobs will be just as varied; they become scouts, nectar gatherers, water collectors and robbers. <sup>3</sup> | ||
Revision as of 03:33, 11 October 2018
Bee's General information
Bee colonyThe honeybee is a social insect with three type of individuals: the queen, worker and the drone. Each of them has a special function in the colony. The queen is the only female completely developed sexually, that's the reason why it’s the mother of all bees. There is only one per colony, but it's not a "queen" in the sense that she governs the workers or tell any other bee what to do, she simply lays eggs. A very important function of the queen is to ensure the nest stability and continuity. She controls the sex of her offspring: if its a fertilized egg it will be female, if the egg is unfertilized it would be a male.
On the other hand, the worker honey bees do all of the main tasks in the colony maintain it in good condition. They are females that are not fully developed sexually. The tasks change with their age because they're correlated with the physiological development of different glands, but can also change depending on the needs of the colony.
The last type of honey bee are the drones, the males of the colony. They just have one function: fertilize the queen. After mating, the drone dies. They don't have a sting, do not carry pollen, are unable to produce wax and only last six months.1
Queens lay an egg for each cell. Their yolk serves as food source until, three days later, a larva emerges. On the fourth and fifth day, larvae feed on royal jelly. On the sixth day, larvae transition from jelly to pollen and honey (bee bread), which they will feed on until the ninth day. Brood prepared to be queens are fed royal jelly (and not bee bread) until the ninth day. Larval cells are then capped with wax, where bees will develop as pupae until they emerge depending on their caste. Worker bees emerge on the 16th day, queen bees emerge the 21st and drones emerge last, on the 24th.
3
Honeybee immunity.
The honeybee's immune system is the principal barrier against diseases and pathogens. It is classified into social and individual immunity 4.
The Anatomy of the bees.
The mouth is the first part of the digestive system. It is in the anteroinferior part of the head and belongs to the licking-sucking classification. The queen, the drone and the worker bee present different structures.6
When Bees take liquid foods using the proboscis, which is formed by different pieces of the oral apparatus.6 The proboscis is not an organ as such, but it is a group of structures that unite and have a particular function. By this retractable structure is how it ingest and regurgitates, nectar, water or honey.7 Bellow is an image where the structure is retracted and when it is not.
When the proboscis is retracted, the tube is under the head; when the bee prepares to absorb liquids, it projects it forward, extending its distal parts around the tongue, in such a way that a tube is formed that closes in front of the distal end of the maxilla; in the back, the labial palps close.6
Unfolding the tube is introduced into the liquid, in quick movements back and forth the liquid rises. When the mandible and proboscis are contaminated, are the vehicle for an infestation of larvae by American foulbrood (Paenibacillus larvae) or European foulbrood (Melissococcus plutonius).6
The Esophagus is a tube that extends along the thorax, whereby food does it road thanks to its contraction movements, by muscle waves that move in an anteroposterior way.6
In the proximal end of the abdomen, the esophagus widens into a sack with thin and highly elastic walls, named the social stomach. When it is filled, their walls expand rhythmically causing their content mix. It is also used as food stock. The proventriculus is a narrow, muscular channel that controls the entry of food into the stomach (ventricle) of the bees, acting as a filter, eliminating the solids from the content of the social stomach. Its previous part is X-shaped. Through this valve, the bee can selectively remove the pollen from the nectar or honey and pass it to the ventricle. Below is an illustration of this valve.6,7