From the moment the queen bee lays an egg until the day the worker bee’s end of life we follow the typical life cycle of a worker honey bee in 10 steps.
There are 3 types of bees (or castes) in a honey bee colony. Typically there will be 1 queen, about 50 male bees (drones) and 99% of infertile female bees (workers). For example, if a typical honey bee colony of 50,000 bees there will be just 1 queen, 50 workers and 49,949 bees. But this is only an average estimate and it depends on a lot of things. For example the season, environment, food sources, colony health and the time of year or season.
Worker bees that are born just before winter can often live much longer than 6 weeks or so. These bees are known as winter bees. And their lives are longer on average because the colder days and unfavourable weather during winter will often mean the worker will not forage as often as her sisters during spring and summer. Less foraging will generally extend the worker bees life.
When it comes to the worker honey bee, there are 3 important numbers beekeepers should remember, 3, 9 and 21. These numbers are worth remembering because they represent the 3 stages of the worker honey bees first stages of its life. Considering the queen lays the worker egg on day 1, the worker hatches from an egg into larvae after day 3. The cell is sealed after day 9. And finally, the worker will emerge from it’s cell after day 21. These numbers are different for queen bees and the drone bee. Every beekeeper should know these first 3 stages to properly manage a honey bee colony effectively in order to control swarming.
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