Updated date: The Life of the Queen Bee in the Honey Bee Hive

Honey bees are greatly admired by Ms. Giordano. They are a favorite topic for her writing and public speakng.

The queen bee is the mother and monarch of the honey bee (Apis mellifera).hive.The life cycle of the queen bee and her affect upon the hive is fascinating. This article answers 10 questions that together tell the story of the life of a queen bee.

The Queen Bee

The queen bee of a honey bee hive has a complex, and very interesting, life. Pixabay (modified by Catherine Giordano)

1. How Is a Queen Bee Created?

The queen begins her life as an ordinary egg. She becomes a queen because the “nurse bees," the worker bees who tend the brood (bees in the egg, larva, and pupa stage) give her a special diet of royal jelly. The queen will be fed royal jelly throughout her life

Royal jelly is an enriched form of honey produced by the nurse bees which contain the protein called royalactin. The nurse bees make the royal jelly from glands on their heads.

All bee larvae get royal jelly for three days, but the larvae designated to become queens are fed only royal jelly until they emerge.

The other bee larvae, after the first three days, will be fed with ordinary honey and pollen (bee bread) until they emerge, the same diet they will have throughout their lives.

The royal jelly diet enables the queen bee to emerge sooner than other bees because she goes through each of the phases of development faster than the other bees. The queen has a developmental period of only 16 days, whereas worker bees take 21 days to emerge.

2. How Many Queen Bees Are in a Hive?

There is only one queen bee per hive.

The first queen to emerge will locate the other potential queens who are still in the pupa stage and kill them. If two queens emerge simultaneously, they will fight to the death. The survivor becomes the queen of the hive.

3. How Large Is a Queen Bee?

The queen bee is larger than the other bees. She is about 18 to 22 mm long (about 3/4 of an inch) and weighs about 200 mg (about /150 of an ounce).

Most of the bees in a hive are the female worker bees which are 12-15 mm long and weigh about 100 mg.

Drones, the male bees, are a little bit larger than worker bees, but there are relatively few drones in a hive—200 to 300 in a hive of 50,000 bees.

The Relative Size of a Worker, Queen, and Drone

4. How Does the Queen Bee Mate?

The queen bee mates only once in her life when she is about a week old. The mating occurs during a "nuptial flight." As many as 20 drones will mate with her in the air. The queen stores the sperm she receives during this time in a special organ called the spermatheca.

A male drone mounts the queen in mid-air and inserts his endophallus, ejaculating semen. After ejaculation, a male honey bee pulls away from the queen, and in the process, his endophallus is ripped from his body. It remains attached to the queen’s body. The next male to mate with the queen removes the previous endophallus and then inserts his own.

Each of the successful drones dies quickly after mating. The removal of the endophallus has ripped open their abdomens .Even drones that survive their nuptial flight may be ejected from the hive and left to die—they no longer have a purpose.

5. What Happens After the Queen Bee Mates?

After her nuptial flight, the queen bee returns to the hive and usually never leaves it again.

If the hive becomes over-crowded or the bees find it unsuitable in some way, the queen will leave, and the other bees will follow in a swarm. This swarm creates a new hive.

The bees that remain in the old hive will produce a new queen.

6. How Many Eggs Does the Queen Bee Lay?

The queen will lay about 1000 to 2000 eggs per day. The number of eggs laid and the pace of egg-laying is determined by food availability. If there are no flowers from which to obtain nectar which is used to make honey to feed the hive, as in the winter months in cold-weather regions, the queen will not lay any eggs.

The queen can lay unfertilized eggs of fertilized eggs. She fertilizes the eggs using the sperm obtained from the drones during mating.

The unfertilized eggs contain a unique combination of the queen’s genes. They become haploid drones—bees with only one chromosome instead of two. The fertilized eggs become female bees--worker bees and potential queens.

The queen lays her eggs in a careful pattern inserting each egg into a cell of the honeycomb constructed by the worker bees. She starts in the center and moves outward. This allows the worker bees to prepare each cell and seal it with wax after an egg has been deposited.

7. How Long Does the Queen Bee Live?

The queen lives for about two to five years, usually three to four years.

In contrast, worker bees hatched in the spring and summer live about six to seven weeks. Worker bees hatched in the autumn live through the winter and so have a life span of four to six months.

Drones can live for up to four months, but if food is scarce, the worker bees will eject the drones from the hive. And as previously noted, drones die immediately after mating with the queen. It seems the male honey bee, just can’t catch a break.

The Queen Bee Surrounded by Her "Court"

The queen bee reigns is surrounded by her “court”. The bees form a circle around her to protect her. Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons (modified by Catherine Giordano)

8. How Does the Queen Bee Reign Over the Hive?

Honey bees have one of the most complex pheromonal communication systems found in nature. They have 15 different glands that produce an array of compounds which affect the behavior of the other bees in the hive. The queen produces pheromones known as “the queen’s signal.”

The primary component of the queen’s signal is “Queen Mandibular Pheromone” (QMP). It affects social behavior, maintenance of the hive, suppression of queen rearing, the inhibition of ovary development in worker bees, and all the daily worker activities such as cleaning, building, guarding, foraging, and brood feeding.

The queen is always surrounded by her "court." These bees act as her body guards. They form a circle around her with all their heads pointing towards her. They walk backwards so that their heads are always pointing towards the queen.

If a queen is old or sick, she will emit a low pheromonal signal. The diminished signal stimulates the bees to produce new queens. Without the queen’s signal, the hive will become dysfunctional and die.

If a bee hive becomes too large, the communication between the queen and the bees that are furthest from the center of the hive may be disrupted. This will trigger swarming—bees will leave the hive along with the queen. It is the scent of the queen that keeps the bees together in a swarm as “scout bees”find a location for a new hive.

When the queen leaves along with the swarming bees, a new queen replaces her.

9. How Does a Hive Get a New Queen Bee?

As a queen ages, she starts producing fewer eggs and/or starts laying them in a less organized way. Or perhaps her queen signal is weakening. Either way, it’s time for a “supersedure”— he process of replacing an old queen. A new queen is produced and the aging queen is killed after the supersedure process.

The Queen Bee as an Idiom

The human "queen bee" is more about vanity and control than about service. Pixabay

10. Why Do We Use the Expression “Queen Bee”?

When we call a woman or girl a queen bee, we do it because she is at the center of a female social circle. The others in this circle cater and defer to her.

The queen bee of a honey bee hive is at the center of a hive and she is surrounded by other bees that have the specific task of caring for the queen. They feed her and tend to all her needs.

The queen bee of a honey bee hive is an amazing creature that dedicates her life to the well-being of the hive, unlike the human queen bees who only seek self-aggrandizement.

A Unique Book for People Who Love Bees

© 2017 Catherine Giordano

Agashawilber on September 24, 2019:

Amazing facts.

Asheber on March 11, 2019:

very interesting.

Catherine Giordano (author) from Orlando Florida on March 27, 2018:

TonyLe: There is only one flight. It may last for a few hours. Once she returns from her nuptial flight, her every need is provided by other bees in the hive whose sole job is to care for her.

TonyLe on March 27, 2018:

Hi. During the queen bee:

1) "nurial flight", where does she sleep at

night?

2) And, how many days does it take?

3) Does she come back to her hive every

night?

4) Who do feed her?

5) what time of the date does she come and

go?

Thx.

Catherine Giordano (author) from Orlando Florida on October 07, 2017:

Julie: A queen bee may leave the hive to start a new hive. However, she is always in the middle of a swarm; never alone.

Julie on October 07, 2017:

I had a queen bee on my porch railing. Why would a queen leave. I have no idea where she came from?

Catherine Giordano (author) from Orlando Florida on February 13, 2017:

Lawrence Hebb: I congratulate you on your garden and helping your neighbor feed his bees. I think everyone should plant a few bee-friendly plants in their yards.

Catherine Giordano (author) from Orlando Florida on February 13, 2017:

bravewarrior: A lot of what happens in the hive is controlled by the queen's pheromones. My guess is that pheromones instruct the nurse bees to begin the process of creating new queens, but which eggs are selected may be random.

Lawrence Hebb on February 12, 2017:

This was fascinating, our next door neighbour has a couple of hives on their property, I love my garden, so the bees taking the nectar and fertilizing the veggies is a 'win-win'.

Great article.

Lawrence

Shauna L Bowling from Central Florida on February 09, 2017:

Fascinating, Catherine! How do the nurse bees determine which eggs will get the extra nurturing necessary to create a queen?

Catherine Giordano (author) from Orlando Florida on January 29, 2017:

Itsuma: Thanks for yur comment. I will have to research your question about royal jelly.

ITSUMA on January 28, 2017:

Thanks a million Cathy. It is really an interesting post and very educating. Is there any method that can be used to produce. Royal jelly alone as Fed to the queen bee and harvested in large quantity?

Catherine Giordano (author) from Orlando Florida on January 24, 2017:

Thank you Venkatachan. The more I learn about bees, the more amazed I am. They have a very complex social organization.

Venkatachari M from Hyderabad, India on January 24, 2017:

This is a wonderful story of Queen Bee and the life in beehives.

Thanks for this informative article.

Catherine Giordano (author) from Orlando Florida on January 21, 2017:

Larry Rankin: Thanks. Bees are indeed fascinating. The more I learn, the more fascinated I am.

Catherine Giordano (author) from Orlando Florida on January 21, 2017:

MsDora; You make a very interesting comment. I hadn't thought about what humans could learn from bees. Maybe we can learn from bees, dedication for instance. I hope yu don't mean the part about kicking the males out. :)

Dora Weithers from The Caribbean on January 21, 2017:

Power to the real Queen Bee. Too bad she does not live forever. You gave many interesting bits of information about the organization of these creatures. We can learn a lot from them about care and respect. Hopefully, we find the fight to survive unnecessary.

Larry Rankin from Oklahoma on January 21, 2017:

Just fascinating.

Catherine Giordano (author) from Orlando Florida on January 20, 2017:

Thank you FlourishAnyway. I thought I knew a lot about bees. I'be been writing about them for two years. My research for this article taught me some new things and deepened my appreciation for these amazing creatures.

FlourishAnyway from USA on January 20, 2017:

I learned so much from this article excellent description of bees' unforgiving existence. Extremely well done!

Catherine Giordano (author) from Orlando Florida on January 20, 2017:

The social order of bees is amazing. And the expression 'busy as a bee" did not come into general use for nothing.

simplehappylife on January 20, 2017:

Wow. What a brutal life! Extremely interesting hub Catherine!