Honey bees (Apis mellifera L.) are one of mankind’s most well-known, popular and economically beneficial insects. For thousands
of years, humans have plundered natural honey bee colonies to get honey, bee larvae and beeswax. In more recent centuries,
bee plundering has given way to bee management. Today, honey bees are kept in artificial hives throughout the United States,
and a large and sophisticated beekeeping industry provides valuable honey, beeswax and pollination services. A large section of
the industry, well represented in Georgia, is devoted to producing queens and bees for sale to other beekeepers. Although many
people make a living from bees, most beekeepers are hobbyists who have only a few hives and who simply enjoy working with
these fascinating insects.
Honey Bee Castes
Honey bees, like ants, termites and some wasps, are social insects. Unlike ants and wasps, bees are vegetarians; their protein comes
from pollen and their carbohydrate comes from honey which they make from nectar. Social insects live together in groups, cooperate
in foraging tasks and the care of young, and have different types, or "castes," of individuals. In honey bees there are two genders,
the females of which are further divided into two castes – sterile workers and fertile queens:
Development
The queen lays all her eggs in hexagonal beeswax cells built by workers. Developing young honey bees (called "brood") go through
four stages: the egg, the larva (plural "larvae"), the inactive pupa (plural "pupae") and the young adult (Figures 4-6). The types of
bees have different development times (Table 1). These intervals, however, are literature averages and do not always apply locally.
For example, it is common for worker bees in Georgia to emerge in 19 days and queens in 15.
Worker Activity
Newly-emerged workers begin working almost immediately. As they age, workers do the following tasks in this sequence: clean cells,
circulate air with their wings, feed larvae, practice flying, receive pollen and nectar from foragers, guard hive entrance and forage.
Unlike colonies of social wasps and bumble bees, honey bee colonies live year after year. Therefore, most activity in a bee colony
is aimed at surviving the next winter.
After the swarming season, bees concentrate on storing honey and pollen for winter. By late summer, a colony has a core of brood
below insulating layers of honey, pollen and a honey-pollen mix. In autumn, bees concentrate in the lower half of their nest, and
during winter they move upward slowly to eat the honey and pollen.