The success of the colony to survive the winter is
largely dependent upon the health of the bees in the fall and the beekeeper’s
efforts in setting up the hive for winter. Fall is a time of transition in the
bee hive. The bee colony’s population is changing from the short-lived bees of
summer to the longer-lived bees that live through the winter. Bees born in the
early fall are the ones that will produce the brood food for the first bees the
colony rears the following year. Food stores are important. Bees must be able
to sustain themselves until flowers bloom again in the spring. The bees store
food of both honey and pollen in cells in the bee hive. Other necessary
nutrients for the colony’s survival are stored in fat bodies in the individual bees’
abdomens. The more food that bees have available in the fall, the more nutrients
they store in these fat bodies. These bees with well-filled fat bodies are best
able to produce brood food for bees reared before flowers start blooming in the
spring.
The health of the bees is important for the survival
of the colony through the winter. If a large number of the colony’s bees are afflicted
by viruses spread by parasitic mites or by Nosema disease, many bees will
likely die over winter. Hives losing excessive bees often do not have enough
bees to maintain a warm environment in the winter cluster. In preparing the
hive in the fall, the beekeeper needs to check for the presence of bee parasites.
If Varroa mite loads are high, the colony will not survive for very long.
Reducing Small Hive Beetle levels to a minimum in the fall helps control these
pests in the following year. The winter bee hive must also be provided with
adequate ventilation to prevent the warm, moist air from condensing inside the
hive and dripping water on the clustered bees. Today’s photo: Jeremy Bemis
prepares hives for winter.
--Richard
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