A beekeeper in Minnesota is carefully measuring the
temperature inside his bee hives. He recorded a daytime temperature of 70
degrees Fahrenheit and a nighttime temperature of 38 degrees. He asks me what I
think of the temperature differences, and he asks if I feel that there is a
problem. While Minnesota experiences extremely cold winters, honey bees are
very capable of regulating the atmosphere of their hive. They also employ
measures to conserve energy and food reserves necessary to survive harsh northern
winters. First, they do not attempt to warm their entire hive, only the bees
and brood. The bees form a cluster to generate and conserve warmth. Loosely
packed bees inside the cluster generate heat by eating their high-energy food,
honey, and “shivering” their flight muscles. These bees can create about 104
degrees in their muscle tissue. Bees on the outside of the cluster form a
tightly packed crust to hold in the generated heat. As bees on the outside
chill, bees from the inside change places with them. The bees are not wasteful
of honey stores needed to feed the workers generating heat. They do not attempt
to warm the entire hive, just the cluster of bees.
The bees’ second honey conservation effort involves
lowering the cluster temperature whenever there is no brood present. Brood must
be kept warmer than adult bees. Brood is held at 95 degrees Fahrenheit. A
number of races of bees, especially those originating in northern Europe and
Asia, restrict the feeding of their queen to force her to stop laying eggs in
the winter. When the colony is not tending brood, it lowers its colony cluster
temperature to around 70 degrees, the daytime temperature measured in the
Minnesota hive. The temperature of the hive outside the cluster drops at
nighttime. In today’s photo, we see bees gathering granulated sugar that I
placed for emergency feeding atop a hive’s inner cover. Bees access the sugar
through the inner cover’s center hole.
--Richard
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