TAILIEUCHUNG - Gilles Fert - Introducing Queens

Gilles Fert - Introducing Queens As a general rule, it is easier to get a queen accepted by a colony during a nectar flow. If no nectar is being brought in, acceptance will be helped by a feed. Other considerations must be borne in mind, in particular: | Gilles Fert - Introducing Queens http fert Version française Español Deutsche version Return to the World s First Virtual Beekeeping Gallery Introducing Queens Breeding queens Extract from Breeding queens by Gilles FERT Order As a general rule it is easier to get a queen accepted by a colony during a nectar flow. If no nectar is being brought in acceptance will be helped by a feed. Other considerations must be borne in mind in particular first make sure that the hive has in fact been orphaned and of course is without a virgin queen give the bees the time and opportunity to get used to their new queen. She herself should be protected by a mesh allowing her to maintain physical contact with the workers by exuding royal pheromones at the heart of the colony . Many beekeepers introduce the queens directly without any protective devices if laying has not stopped. This can also be done with incubator-born virgin queens they are exposed directly to an artificial swarm provoked three hours earlier. But things are different for queens which have spent several days in a transit cage. Although no method is perfect acceptance of these queens is best after imprisoning a queen on a broodcomb with a wire mesh press-on cage measuring 10 cm x 8 cm by cm deep Fig 70 . 1 of 3 03 10 2006 4 39 PM Gilles Fert - Introducing Queens http fert Fig. 70 Introduction cage made with a square piece of metal wire grill. Select a broodcomb with emerging brood. This will allow the queen to surround herself rapidly with her court and to lay in the cells as births take place. Before opening the transit cage we recommend dipping it in water in order to wet the queen and thus prevent her from flying. The longer her laying has been halted the greater the risk of her flying off on the other hand a queen in full laying activity is more or less incapable of flying . The escort bees are destroyed. The queen is then introduced

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