On a warm mid-winter day, a beekeeper observes numerous dead
bees on the ground outside one of his hives. Inside the hive, he finds a small
cluster of dead bees with many of the dead facing head-first into empty cells. A
dead queen bee is located in the center of the cluster of bees. There is an
empty supersedure queen cell adjacent to the cluster of bees with a trap door
still attached, a tell-tale indication that a virgin queen has recently
emerged. A queen that emerges in the winter is of no use to the colony because
she will not be able to successfully mate with drones. There is no honey in the
vicinity of the cluster of dead bees. A few capped cells indicate that the bees
had been attending brood before the bees died. It appears that the bees died of
starvation. With a relatively mild winter, the bees had been able to fly from
their hive on a number of days; however, on their foraging flights, the bees hadn’t
brought in enough food to meet the needs of their expanding colony.
Starvation is the greatest killer of honey bee colonies.
They die because they don’t have food available to the cluster of bees. This
often occurs even when there are ample stores of honey in the hive, but it is
beyond the reach of the winter cluster. The cluster remains on the combs
containing brood to feed and protect the fragile, developing bees. They eat the
food nearby, as they did in today’s photo by George Bujarski. On prolonged
periods of cold, the bees will not move throughout the hive to gather stored
honey. Because honey bees share their food, they starve together. Since this colony
exhibited no signs of disease, like American foulbrood, it will be safe for the
beekeeper to reuse the hive and frames of drawn combs. He will protect the
combs from hive scavengers till replacement bee colonies are available in the
spring.
--Richard