Where Do Honeybees Go in the Winter?
When temperatures in the winter drop below 50 °F (10 °C), honeybees retreat to their hives and form a winter cluster to keep warm—sort of like a giant three-month slumber party. But it’s not all pillow fights and fun. The fate of the hive depends on how sufficiently the winter population has prepared for the cold.
The social world of honeybees is normally divided into three castes: workers, drones, and queens. But in the winter the male drones die off, leaving only the female castes: the workers and the queen. The all-female swarm of bees crowds together tightly to form the winter cluster, with the queen at the warmest, core section of the group and the workers shaking and shivering around to maintain a survivable heat.
At the center of the winter cluster,
Where Do Honeybees Go in the Winter?
Reviewed by faster share
on
September 03, 2018
Rating:
Reviewed by faster share
on
September 03, 2018
Rating:

