Ask Yahoo!
Ask Home - Yahoo! - Help

 Ask Yahoo!
Friday April 28, 2006 Previous | Next
Dear Yahoo!:
How is a queen bee chosen? Is she born a queen?
Julie
Sudbury, Ontario
Dear Julie:

Although queen bees do get special treatment, their lives aren't all roses and tiaras.

When bees need a new queen, special "queen cells" are made in the hive. Zoo.org describes these cells as extensions of the wax and shaped like a peanut. Young worker bees secrete a special food called "royal jelly," and place it in the queen cells as food for the special larvae.

According to honey.com, a queen is chosen as a two-day-old larva. Once she emerges from her cell, she quickly finds and kills any rivals. Then she mates with enough drone (male) bees to give her enough sperm cells to last her lifetime (about two to five years). She can lay up to 2,000 eggs each day, and chooses eggs to be drone or worker bees by either fertilizing them (worker) or not (drone). Once a queen dies, a new one is chosen, and the cycle begins again.

 
Related Links
·What is the last name of the British royal family?
·What's the smallest flying creature in the world?
More Questions About
·Insects
Get Ask Your Way
·Most Popular
·Yahoo! Toolbar
· View RSS Feed  add to My Yahoo!
Email this page -    Save to del.icio.us    Save to My Web    Digg This

Copyright © 2006 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved. Privacy Policy - Terms of Service - Copyright/IP Policy

All information available through or in connection with Ask Yahoo! is informational only and provided "as is" without warranties, representations, or guarantees of any kind. Yahoo! disclaims any and all implied warranties respecting Ask Yahoo!. Use of Ask Yahoo! is entirely at your own risk and is not a substitute for conducting your own research.