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  2. Characteristics of common wasps and bees - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Characteristics_of_common...

    2 2 1.5–3 depending on species 2 (Vespula pensylvanica) 2 2.x 4.0+ [4] [failed verification] Lights Not attracted to lights at night unless nest is disturbed, or light is placed near hive, or bee is sick. [5] Attracted to lights at night [6] [7] Lives in Large colonies of flat, wax-based honeycomb hanging vertically.

  3. Lesser wax moth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lesser_wax_moth

    Lesser wax moths are known or suspected to inhabit most of Africa (including Madagascar), Australia, Europe (especially some more remote regions, such as Greece) and North America, as well as parts of the Neotropics (such as Colombia, Jamaica, Puerto Rico and Trinidad), the Bengal region, Japan, Sri Lanka, New Zealand, and the Marquesas Islands and Tahiti in French Polynesia.

  4. Forage (honey bee) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forage_(honey_bee)

    The forage sources for honey bees are an important consideration for beekeepers. In order to determine where to locate hives for maximum honey production and brood one must consider the off-season. If there are no honey flows the bees may have to be fed. Bees that are used for commercial pollination are usually fed in the holding yards.

  5. Centris pallida - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centris_pallida

    The amount of bee bread provided will directly affect the size of the offspring (more food = larger size). When the food has been eaten and the larva has fully developed, the larva will turn into a prepupa. Over the course of eleven months, the prepupa will undergo metamorphosis to become an adult bee. The adult bee will then dig to the surface ...

  6. American foulbrood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_foulbrood

    In January 2023, the United States Department of Agriculture approved the world's first vaccine for bees. The vaccine protects the bees from foulbrood and is dispensed by adding an inactive version of the bacteria to royal jelly consumed by worker bees, who feed the queen bee, who in turn passes immunity to her offspring.

  7. List of diseases of the honey bee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_diseases_of_the...

    The entrance to this beehive is littered with chalkbrood mummies that have been expelled from the hive by hygienic worker bees. Ascosphaera apis causes a fungal disease that only affects bee brood, but adult bees can be carriers. [34] It infests the gut of the larvae before the cell is sealed or soon after. [35]

  8. Small hive beetle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Small_hive_beetle

    [2] Younger small hive beetles have a very distinguishable appearance than adults. The beetle eggs are elongated with a white color. The beetle larvae have reduced white color with a segmented body shape. They have three pairs of legs behind the head. When the exoskeleton develops, the pupae turn to brown color which looks more similar to ...

  9. Hive management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hive_management

    Pollen is collected by installing a pollen trap at the entrance of the bee hive. There are varying designs for pollen traps. The pollen trap makes access to the hive harder for the foraging bees. In the process of climbing through the pollen trap wires some pollen is loosened from the bee's pollen basket and falls into a collection container ...