Bee larvae that are fed royal jelly for longer than three days have been selected to be queen bees. After the first three days, the bee larvae are typically fed nectar or diluted honey and pollen.
The queen doesn't eat royal jelly, she has nectar, same as the other bees. Royal jelly is fed to all young larvae. After a couple of days worker larvae are fed a mixture of pollen and honey, but queen larvae are fed royal jelly right up to the time they pupate.
Bee milk is another name for royal jelly, a secretion from the hypo-pharyngeal glands of young worker bees which is used to feed all larvae in the colony, including those destined to become worker bees or drones. Larvae are also fed pollen mixed with a little honey, except for a larva chosen to become a queen which is fed exclusively on large quantities of royal jelly for the first four days of its development. This triggers it to develop into a queen.
Once the hive is stimulated to produce extra queens, the royal jelly is removed from the larger cells where the queen larvae are growing. In a single season, about 500 grams of royal jelly can be harvested.
Bees don't select another bee to become queen. They can take any worker egg (all workers are female), and they feed the larva which hatches from it on a secretion from their hyperpharyngeal glands called bee milk or royal jelly. This is a very rich food and it triggers the larva to develop into a queen rather than a worker.
It is possible to make a jelly cat food and the cat eat the jelly leaving the rest depending on the flavor appeal to the cat.
Queen bee
Royal jelly.
The nurse bees absolutely stuffs the larvae full of 'Royal jelly', which is like the jelly other larvae eat but with more sugar, the extra sugar make them a much larger size.
For the first three days after hatching from the egg all larvae are fed on a substance produced in the nurse bees' hyperpharyngeal glands, called bee milk or royal jelly. After three days worker and drone larvae are fed on a mixture of royal jelly, nectar or diluted honey, and pollen, but queen larvae continue to be fed pure royal jelly right up to the time their cell is capped.
The queen doesn't eat royal jelly, she has nectar, same as the other bees. Royal jelly is fed to all young larvae. After a couple of days worker larvae are fed a mixture of pollen and honey, but queen larvae are fed royal jelly right up to the time they pupate.
no they are not alike because they are born with different jelly
When the queen bee dies one of the worker bees feeds a larvae some royal jelly and the larvae becomes the queen
Just eating a handful would not have much of a chance of causing a problem. If you eat a large amount, the sugar can act as both an acid and an abrasive. Potentially, it could cause a bit of a raw spot.
Zorn jelly has harmful chemicals in it. Some candies have Zorn jelly in them stick to eating choclates instead
17/51 chance
No, Colds are caused by a virus.
To put predators off eating it.