I think that someone has been pulling your stinger!!! Although there is a Queen bee, there is no such thing as a King bee. A colony of honey bees is comprised of a queen (the only fertile female), several hundred drones (male bees), and up to 80000 workers (infertile females). About five days after a virgin queen emerges from the cell that she grew in, she will leave the colony on a mating flight and will mate with approximately 30 drones, all of which die after mating. After a further five days this newly mated queen will start laying eggs. She never mates again and that one mating will last for the rest of her life. If her normal life cycle hasn't been interrupted by a beekeeper and her fertility starts to wane, the worker bees will make a joint decision to supersede the failing queen. They do this by building a queen cell around an egg that is less than three days old and feeding it a substance known as royal jelly. After fifteen days this particular egg will emerge as a new virgin queen and the old failing queen will be eliminated. The whole cycle then repeats itself. The waggle dance that you referred to is a series of movements done by a worker bee inside the hive to show other workers the direction and distance of a source of nectar that it has found.
If the food is a long way off the be does a waggle dance. This dance points out the direction of the foodand the distance from the hive it can be found.
A waggle dance is a dance in the form of a figure eight performed by a honey bee in order to communicate the direction and distance of patches of flowers or water sources.
Waggle dance and beebop.
The 'waggle dance' is a series of movements made by honey bees inside the colony to indicate to the other bees where a source of pollen or nectar has been found. The 'dance' tells the bees how far from the colony and the direction in relation to the sun.
Every dance is different, just as every sentence in every language is different. Basically, its not so much of a dance as it is a coordinated movement in a specific pattern. 2. See related link below to a video of the 'Waggle Dance' .
A honey bee shows other bees within the hive, the direction and distance of a supply of pollen that it has found. It does this by moving in different directions and shapes on a section of comb. These movements are known as the 'Waggle Dance'.
Bees do the waggle dance where they communicate to their hive mates. Is the term for a particular figure of 8 dance of the honey bee. This dance allows the bees to share information of the direction and distance of flowers; water sources,housing or pollen with their mates. Consists of one or 100 more circuits. A worker bees waggle dance is running through a figure of 8 called a "waggle run" which is followed by a turn to the right to circle back to the starting point; then followed by another waggle run but this time turning to the left. The bees adjust the angles of their dances to accommodate with the changing direction of the sun.
The first bees to find a flower do so by chance. If there appears to be a good supply of nectar, on return to the hive the bee will give samples of the nectar to other forages so they can identify the type of flower, and will perform the 'waggle dance' where the bee moves round on the comb in a circle or figure-of-eight pattern, stopping at points and rapidly vibrating, or waggling, her abdomen. The angle between the direction the bee is facing when waggling and the vertical gives the direction of the source with respect to the sun, and the duration of the waggle is proportionate to the distance.
A worker honey bee is able to tell the other bees in its hive the direction and distance of a source of nectar or pollen that it has found (The Waggle Dance). A drone (male) bee dies immediately after mating. A queen honey bee can lay 1000 to 2000 eggs per day.
Austrian ethologist Karl von Frisch discovered that honey bees convey information to one another through a unique dance language. He described how bees perform the "waggle dance" to communicate the location of food sources to their hive mates. Von Frisch's work in the 1940s earned him a Nobel Prize in 1973.
Honey bees are social insects that live in colonies with a queen, workers, and drones. They are important pollinators, collecting nectar and pollen to make honey. They have a complex communication system involving pheromones and dance movements to communicate with each other.
The honey bee 'waggle dance' is a means of communication. When a scout bee returns to the hive after finding a new source of nectar she passes samples of the nectar to the surrounding bees then runs round a 'figure of eight' path on the face of the comb. As she passes through the centre part of the path she pauses and vibrates her abdomen, then repeats the process. The angle between the vertical and the direction the bee is facing when she 'waggles' gives the direction to the source relative to the sun, vertically up being directly towards the sun, and the duration of the waggle is proportional to the distance from the hive. Bees are aware of how the sun moves during the day and will make the necessary compensation for this as time passes.