you dont
When the queen bee dies, her daughter becomes the new queen.
If the queen dies a new queen is produced.
The have Conflict And Then The Winner Becomes The New Queen.
Before it mates the queen bee has wings, but when it mates the wings fall off. The bee it has mated with flies away to never be seen or dies.
The only purpose of a honey bee drone is to mate with a virgin queen - after which it dies.
About 50 more or less.
If a queen bee dies, the whole colony will die out soon, because there will be no more production of royal jelly. Royal jelly are needed for potential new queen. Queen bees are the only bees that can produces new drones and workers bees.
The colony breaks down and chaos ensues. Without the queen's pheromones controlling what each class of bee does, the colony will attack each other, as the queen's scent fades from the hive.
Honey bees generally remove all dead bodies from their hive and that would include a deceased queen bee. I have in the past found a dead queen on the ground outside the entrance to a hive. (The reason I could identify it as a queen was that it was colour marked to help find it - many beekeepers mark their queens thus.)
i think it dies It does die. The male bee (drone) actually deposits its genitalia inside the queen bee in a semi-explosive transfer that can be heard as an audible popping. Such a vivsections commits the Drone to a rather painful suffering and eventual death.
When the queen bee dies one of the worker bees feeds a larvae some royal jelly and the larvae becomes the queen
3/4 inches.Hope this helped.Noah