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12856

Effect of Virgin Queens Storage on Their Survival Rate, Attractiveness and Acceptance by the Honey Bee Colonies

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Last updated: 22 Jan 2023

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Abstract

Virgin honeybee queens, were held in the centre of brood nest of both queenless and queenright strong colonies using two types of cages and fed by workers through a wire screen holes, emerging cage (EC) with two wire screen sides and Benton cage (BC) with one side of wire screen. Mean survival rate of stored queens in both cage types were not differ significantly. Storage virgin queens within queen-right colony was influenced reversely by the presence of colony laying queen as the survival rate was significantly lower (68.0%) than queens stored in queenless colonies (77.4%). The attractiveness of introduced virgin queens 30 days old to workers increased when the duration of queenlessness increase from 1 to 7 days and also, the acceptance percentage of them. The number of workers attracted by virgin queens was increased with the storage periods (3, 15 and 30days) as the lowest significant number was for the 3 days period, while there were no significant differences between the rest of periods. The younger and older queens were most significantly accepted than the intermediate ones. Workers in the 5 days queenless nuclei were more attracted and easily accepted the introduced virgin queens than those in similar queenless strong colonies.

DOI

10.21608/eajbsa.2016.12856

Keywords

honeybee queens, survival rate, attractiveness & acceptance, percentage

Authors

First Name

Mohammad

Last Name

Al-Fattah

MiddleName

A.

Affiliation

Department of Economic Entomology and Pesticides, Fac. of Agric., Cairo Univ., Giza, Egypt.

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First Name

Yasser

Last Name

Ibrahim

MiddleName

Y.

Affiliation

Department of Economic Entomology and Pesticides, Fac. of Agric., Cairo Univ., Giza, Egypt.

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Orcid

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First Name

Hatem

Last Name

Sharaf El-Din

MiddleName

A.

Affiliation

Department of Economic Entomology and Pesticides, Fac. of Agric., Cairo Univ., Giza, Egypt.

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Orcid

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Volume

9

Article Issue

1

Related Issue

2437

Issue Date

2016-03-01

Receive Date

2016-02-25

Publish Date

2016-03-01

Page Start

63

Page End

69

Print ISSN

1687-8809

Online ISSN

2090-0813

Link

https://eajbsa.journals.ekb.eg/article_12856.html

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https://eajbsa.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=12856

Order

6

Type

Original Article

Type Code

667

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

Egyptian Academic Journal of Biological Sciences. A, Entomology

Publication Link

https://eajbsa.journals.ekb.eg/

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Article

Created At

22 Jan 2023