From the egg being laid to the new queen emerging from the pupal cell is 16 days.
15 days
The queen bee of a hive does not leave the nest by any means. Without a queen bee, a hive simply cannot exist. If one were to remove the queen bee, it would be a matter of hours before the hive is in complete chaos. In the event the queen bee is about to die, there is already a "lady-in-waiting" to take her place. In simpler terms, the queen cannot be persuaded to leave. It is simply not in their design.
A queen bee is the dominant female bee in a colony. She is responsible for laying eggs and maintaining the hive's population.
Worker bees are responsible for caring for the eggs laid by the queen bee. The queen bee can lay up to 1,500 eggs in a single day during peak season. Worker bees feed and care for the larvae as they develop, eventually sealing the cell with wax once the pupae are fully grown.
The only thing a queen bee does is lay eggs. She does no other work in the hive. She doesn't even feed herself, she is fed and cleaned by worker bees.
15 days
The egg for queen bee like any other bee is laid and in the development stages it is fed with royal jelly.Those larva that get royal jelly develop into queen bees and r3est into workers and drones.
It all depends on whether the queen fertilizes the egg or not. Fertilized eggs will develop into females (workers or another queen), and unfertilized eggs will develop into males (drones). This decision is made by the queen depending on the size of the cell into which she lays the egg. Drone cells are slightly larger than worker cells.
When a queen lays an egg she has the choice of whether or not to fertilize it. If she does, it will develop into a female; and unfertilized eggs develop into males (drones). The female eggs will usually develop into workers, but if the workers build a queen cell around it and feed the larva exclusively on royal jelly it will develop into a new queen. What is interesting is that it is the workers that decide which egg is to develop into a new queen, not the queen.
The queen bee of a hive does not leave the nest by any means. Without a queen bee, a hive simply cannot exist. If one were to remove the queen bee, it would be a matter of hours before the hive is in complete chaos. In the event the queen bee is about to die, there is already a "lady-in-waiting" to take her place. In simpler terms, the queen cannot be persuaded to leave. It is simply not in their design.
Royal jelly is what it is called
a matter of size
There is no "King Bee" The leader of a Bee Colony would be the Queen. And the average life expectancy would depend on the specific species of bee.
A queen bee is the dominant female bee in a colony. She is responsible for laying eggs and maintaining the hive's population.
A honey bee queen is an egg-laying machine.
A honey bee queen can live for four or five years but beekeepers usually replace them after two years.
When the queen bee dies, her daughter becomes the new queen.