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http://www.pestid.msu.edu/InsectsArthropods/YellowjacketsVespulaspp/tabid/258/Default.aspx The yellow jacket queen leaves the hive to find a place to overwinter under bark on a tree, the hive dies. The queen will start a new hive elsewhere in the spring.
There is only 1 queen bee in th hive.
When the queen leaves her nursery nest she takes a group of workers with her, this is a swarm, they then form their own colony.
To naturally requeen a hive, you can introduce a new queen bee by allowing the hive to raise a new queen from their own eggs or by introducing a queen cell from another hive. This process allows the hive to replace their old queen with a new one without human intervention.
Under normal circumstances, there will only be one queen in a hive,
A queen bee typically lives in the hive along with worker bees. She can be found in the central area of the hive known as the brood chamber where she lays eggs. The queen is the largest bee in the colony and plays a crucial role in maintaining the health and productivity of the hive.
In the hive
The oldest bee in the hive is most likely to be the queen. She can live for three to five years. Drones can live for up to four months; and workers for up to seven weeks in summer, or four months in winter.
In a hive, there can be multiple queen bees present, but usually only one queen bee will dominate and lay eggs.
When the old hive gets to crowded
Yes, queen bees leave the hive for mating flights where they mate with several drones before returning to the hive. They can also leave the hive temporarily during swarming, a natural reproduction process where a new queen and part of the colony leave to form a new hive.
They don't. Queen bees don't normally leave the hive, and there is only one in each hive.