A new Queen line-up

I wasn't quite sure what to expect today, having come to the conclusion that three queens chose to share the nest last night, one of which we think is brooding.

One of the others has been in there a few days and we've not had concrete visibility of her, so it's possible she's actually died in the nest, as indeed our "August" (2nd Generation) queen did. 

The third queen turned up yesterday and was quite happy to head into the nest and stay there overnight. I didn't know if she would venture out today or what her behaviour pattern would be. 

I got my answer at 10am when she was the first queen to leave, because she tentively crept out of the nest and performed memorisation circling around the entrance to memorise the location of the nest. This means it was her first exit and that she planned on coming back. Sure enough, 21 minutes later she returned and from what I can tell, spent the rest of the day in the nest, probably trying to keep warm. 

A new visiting queen, memorising nest location

It was a cold day again today, peaking at 12.4 degrees, so I didn't expect to see much activity or foraging. How wrong I was - trip count was up again on yesterday at 46, levels not seen since September. The Queen (can't be sure which one) is contributing to these trips (8 Queen trips today) which is helping to lift the activity level. 

In fact activity stats for the last few days are as follows:

 

  • 11/10/2011 8
  • 12/10/2011 10
  • 13/10/2011 5
  • 14/10/2011 21
  • 15/10/2011 12
  • 16/10/2011 17
  • 17/10/2011 22
  • 18/10/2011 21
  • 19/10/2011 46

As we can see, quite an upturn in the last few days, despite the temperature drop. This, I suspect, is driven by the Queen brooding. Bombus Terrestris are natural pollen collectors - they just keep doing it when the nest is functioning. So despite the fact the workers have shifted loyalty from their (expired) mother queen to a new queen, they seem quite happy working hard for her. 

 

 

Rainy Rescue

It was looking stormy this evening and although a storm never materialised, about half an hour before sunset it suddenly went chilly and tipped it down. The lavender, as usual, had been full of bees, so we had a quick check to see if any of the more daring (or perhaps less attentive) bees had been caught unawares. Indeed this was the case - both a small redtail and a bufftailed bumblebee were clinging to the lavender, scared to move. 

One by one we cut the lavender and added them to a plastic tub and then took them to the back garden to heat them up. Here's a video of us heating the redtail: 

 

In the case of the bufftail, we brought her indoors as it was absolutely chucking it down by then, and we left her inside to warm up first with a lid on the tub. We waited till the rain past and checked it was still light enough outside (we still had some of our own braver bees leaving the nest, even though it was sunrise). We followed the same procedure with the hair drier and it worked a treat. 

We might have buried one bumblebee tonight, but it's great we could help another two on their way!

Beeing Social

The weekend turned out to be a bit more beeventuful than planned. Although being warm some of the time, it's also been windy and then showery for much of the weekend. Consequently the bees were a bit less active and also getting caught out in the wind. I managed to photograph some clinging on for dear life onto the lavender and also one which landed in the grass to warm up. 

Bufftail hunkering down in the grass to get warm

We then also found another bufftail walking in the grass, which seemed to be having a little difficulty flying; so we used our previously-honed bee catching talents to scoop her up and put her over on the nest box. Eventually after wandering around the gravel she found her way in. 

Not long after that I discovered another bufftail wandering in the grass. On closer inspection, I realised it was damaged, missing a wing and a leg. And on even closer inspection I realised it had the identical problem to Holly, our first disabled bee, with a back twisted in the same direction too (although not quite as badly). There was no question in my mind that we had to care for her too and I thought we might be able to get them to cohabit successfully in the same box. 

We added her to Holly's box and kept watch over several hours. The behaviour went through several phases. At first Holly was very protective and giving lots of aggressive warning signals: lifting her leg, showing her sting etc. Our new bee (no name yet) was less bothered really and spent time chasing round the box and learning her new surroundings. 

 Holly aggressively guarding her daisy & food supplyFinally our second bee gets a look in at the food!Holly's behaviour was quite fascinating. It seemed to go from being quite aggressive initially to being more protective. She would follow the new bee around and shove it about and prod it. At no point did they actually fight, and in fact the new bee was suprisingly patient with its smaller counterpart. We never saw any warning signals from the new bee during the first few hours (though we did see a warning leg once the next day). 

Holly had suddenly found a whole new burst of energy and activity and it's almost as if she now had a role. This seemed to develop into a "supervisory" role - whenever the new bee was resting or minding its own business, it's almost as if Holly came along to prod it into action. Holly would come by and shove the new bee around until it moved. Sometimes she would follow it and keep it moving - it was as if Holly was keeping it busy. 

This behaviour mirrors something we have seen on the bee cam. There are some bees in the nest that seem to patrol the perimeter and if they find any bees resting they shove them about and try to get them moving. (Sometimes the resting bees shrug it off and eventually they part ways). It's as if they have a role to keep everything active. 

The other thing we noticed was how both bees seemed to be crawling all over the moss and wrecking it and moving it around, a bit haphazardly. But actually the more we've observed this, the more of a pattern seems to emerge. Holly does seem to have a habit of retracing the steps of the other bee which perhaps means she is fixing some of the "damage" it is causing. As a bigger bee it can't help but move the moss and flowers around without trying. It does mooch about in some of the moss as if fixing or chaging things, but this behaviour has subsided to a large degree an dit's now spending a fair amount of time resting under the moss or near the hotspot. (And it is almost impossible to spot when it burrows into the moss).  

On the other hand, Holly still seems to be keen on doing 'nest fixing'; she is far more active than the other bee from what we can tell and spends a lot more time moving the bee and the contents of the box around. In fact even as I type, she is in dark, patrolling the open area of the tub and shunting a chunk of dried pollen around. She barely stops! Interestingly, I read an article that suggests the smaller bumble bees are prone to adopt this role:

Although bumble bees also have a division of labor with some worker bees specializing on foraging or nest work, a bumble bee's age is not nearly as good a predictor of what her job is in the colony.  Rather, there is size variation among workers and larger workers tend to spend more time foraging and smaller workers work more in the nest.

When we came down after the first night, they had trashed the box between them! There was flowers and moss everywhere. It's just like we see in the hive outside - each bee seems to have its own idea of how the nest should be arranged and they spend some (or a lot) of their time moving material around and fixing it. If I was forced to commit, I'd say this is the role Holly has adopted, along with a sort of 'supervisor patrol' sideline. Either way, she is now extremely busy compared to what seemed like increasing lethargy prior to addition of the new bee (which had started to trouble us a bit). 

We are also finding that they are co-habiting more co-operatively now after 24 hours. In fact I even saw them lying practically on top of each other right in the best "hot spot" by the laptop. That's pretty impressive compared to the first introduction when it was a "this town ain't big enough for the two of us" warning from Holly. They will quite happily seem to lie in proximity of the hot spot without troubling each other. 

our second disabled bufftail mooching in the mossAlthough there are only two bees in the "High Dependency" tub, we are now hoping that the existence of each other will help them to achieve some of their social instincts.

Hot under the Thorax

Today I started the process of systematically reviewing our CCTV footage to note down the "first exit" and "last arrival" times of our bumblebees. This is something I am curious to plot - I don't expect to find anything particularly astounding but I'm interested to plot the graph and see if it follows a pattern, such as sunlight times. Or whether there is some other pattern that can be identified. I ended up not getting the job finished, partly because I also started review the footage from when we first installed the DVR and also the camera into the hive. Actually, it was kinda funny - when viewing the footage from when we put the camera into the nestbox, it's like something from Blair Witch project! It's dark and jerky, lots of shots of the ground, flashes of faces, every once in a while you see the stanley knife I used to cut the box, and then you see flashes of my infra-red face while wearing marigolds! 

Early Bumble

It was very windy today, so while out in the garden I saw an Early Bumblebee on the Lavender hanging on for dear life! It was clinging with all its might, legs wrapped fully round the flower trying to stay hanging on. This gave me a chance to try some macro photos of it, although the wind was a nightmare and most of the pictures were pretty blurred. Of course, I could have upped the ISO setting on the camera to use a faster shutter speed, but that creates more noise which is undesirable; and actually didn't solve the biggest problem which was trying to track the focus. Anyway, I still got some reasonable pics:

 Early Bumble Bee - Bombus Pratorum - Male (see the moustache!)Early bumble bee - bombus pratorum

It turns out we are seeing male Early bumbles. We can tell they are males because:

  • they are not collecting pollen (they don't, they just feed for themselves)
  • they have a moustache
  • they have 13 segments on their antenna, not 12 like the females

 At one point one of these males flew onto BCW's bright purple jumper, so I got a great photo of it there:

 Early Bumblebee (Male - Bombus Pratorum)

It's a amazing how bright and fluffy they are! They are very unmistakable!

Cold Bufftail

Shortly after we spotting a Bufftail landing on the grass - we weren't sure if it was one of ours or not, but we suspected at first it was just struggling to fly in the gusty wind and was bedding down in the grass for a few moments. Again, I took the opportunity to get some close up photos, although this little bee was more inclined to give me her warning leg.

Bufftail Bumblebee (Bombus terrestris) resting and warming in the grass - also with some grey (Broad Bean) pollen in her basketswarning leg from BufftailEventually we figured that perhaps she was too cold to fly and could do with some help to warm up as we didn't know if she was one of ours (in which case we could have just transported her to our nest box). So I got the garden patio heater out and started to heat the area where she had landed. Within about a minute she buzzed and did some short flights of a few inches, so we knew she was warming up. The ground around her by this time was climbing, and ranging between about 30 degrees and 50 degrees. Within another 30 seconds she was all warmed up and off! She flew over the fence, so we don't know whether she was one of ours or not - either way, it was great to get her on her way!