How long does it take for a wasp to build a nest after training its queen? Here are some things to note when training a waspWasps in the natural environment usually start to build nests after 2-3 months of queen training. If the local altitude is high or the climate is special, it may take more than 4 months for the wasps to start building nests. If it is artificially cultivated wasps, the time of awakening and nesting is usually about 15-30 days earlier than the queen bees in the wild. After the queen bee wakes up, it needs to be supplemented with protein and fed with honey water to help it recover its physical strength. 1. How long does it take for a wasp to build a nest after training its queen 1. Queen training refers to the process of the queen bee recovering her physical condition after waking up from a long hibernation period. Generally, wasps in the natural environment will start building nests after more than 2-3 months of queen training. If it is an area with high altitude or special climate, it may take more than 4 months of queen training for the wasps to start building nests. If it is artificially bred wasps, the time of waking up and building nests will generally be about 15-30 days earlier than the queen bee in the wild. 2. Wasps usually start to build nests from March to May each year. The specific time varies from place to place. The queen bee will only start to build a nest when the temperature rises, food and nesting materials are sufficient. Wild queen bees generally build nests in a natural environment with water, light, food, bark and sap. Artificially cultivated wasps can also follow this ecological environment or lifestyle. 3. Factors such as queen selection, food quality, wintering temperature and humidity, and whether there is harassment from natural enemies during the winter will affect whether the queen bee will be eliminated. Therefore, if you want to raise hornets well, you must fully understand the survival nature of hornets and cannot deliberately change it. 2. Precautions for wasp training 1. Maintain constant temperature during the winter (1) During the winter, the temperature should be kept at a constant level to allow the queen bee to hibernate normally. If the temperature is too high, the queen bee will wake up early to move around and forage for food. The queen bee that wakes up early generally has a poorer physique, a lower rate of eating solid food, and a lower nesting rate, but a higher mortality rate. (2) Take measures to maintain constant temperature in the wintering site or wintering shed. For wintering measures, you can use straw to surround the four sides and top of the wintering shed, or directly cover the wintering barrel with straw. For constant temperature measures, you can cover the sunshade net to keep the temperature between 0-12℃ and the humidity between 50-65%. Under these conditions, the queen bee hibernating in winter is generally in good health and has a higher survival rate. 2. Restore the Queen Bee's Physical Fitness After the queen bee wakes up, it needs to be helped to recover its physical strength. At this time, you can generally supplement the queen bee with protein and feed it honey water (the ratio is 1:4 or 1:5). After 2 days of feeding, the honey water can be appropriately concentrated (1:3 or 1:4). At the same time, the queen bee should be fed 3-4 small bees, or animal food such as grasshoppers and crickets every day. 3. Take good insulation measures After the queen bee wakes up, it is necessary to take heat preservation measures in the morning and evening. If conditions permit, temperature control equipment can be used. The temperature in the queen training shed should be kept between 15-29℃ as much as possible. After about 7-10 days of queen training, it can be placed in the nesting bucket for feeding (if it is a calabash bee, it is generally about 5-8 days of queen training, and the temperature is controlled between 15-26℃). After the queen bee is placed in the nesting bucket, honey and water should be fed separately, or the queen bee can be directly fed with prepared honey water. What do wasps eat? Differences between wasps and Italian beesWasps are typical omnivorous insects, mainly feeding on small insects and larvae of Lepidoptera such as moths and butterflies, as well as nectar from various plants and ripe fruits. From a biological definition, wasps belong to the general term for the Vespidae family of the suborder Vespidae. Representative species include the golden ring wasp and the black tail wasp. All wasps are social insects and make nests for a living. The hive of a small wasp is like an upside-down lotus pod, while the hive of a large wasp is much more complicated. A wasp goes through four stages in its life: egg, larva, pupa, and adult. Each wasp colony is composed of a queen bee, worker bees, and drones. 1. What do wasps eat? 1. Wasps are typical omnivorous insects, mainly feeding on small insects and larvae of Lepidoptera such as moths and butterflies, and sometimes also eating nectar and ripe fruits of various plants. In fact, many large wasps are predatory insects. In mountainous areas, large wasps mainly prey on small wasps, especially in the season of food scarcity, they are more likely to concentrate on killing bees. 2. From a biological definition, wasps are a general term for the Vespidae family of the suborder Vespa. The more representative species include the golden ring wasp and the black tail wasp. All wasps are social insects and make nests for a living. The hive of a small wasp is very similar to an upside-down lotus pod. The hive of a large wasp is much more complicated. It is surrounded by a paper shell on the outside and is mainly divided into many layers inside. The entrance of the nest is generally located at the bottom of the hive. All wasps enter and exit the hive through this nest entrance. In terms of diet, they generally feed on insect larvae, and will prey on bees in large numbers during food shortage seasons. 3. Its life cycle goes through four stages: egg, larva, pupa and adult. Each bee colony is composed of queen bee, worker bees and drones. The queen bee is the female bee, whose role in the bee colony is reproduction. The drone can mate with female bees in the same or different nests and will die after mating. The worker bees are the main labor force of the bee colony, responsible for many of the work of the bee colony, and have poisonous stingers in their tails. 2. The Difference Between Wasps and Bees 1. Different biological classifications (1) Wasp: Wasp is an insect belonging to the animal kingdom, phylum Arthropoda, class Insecta, subclass Pterygota, order Hymenoptera, suborder Nematoda, family Vespidae. (2) Honey bees: Honey bees are insects belonging to the animal kingdom, phylum Arthropoda, class Insecta, subclass Pterygota, order Hymenoptera, suborder Apidae. 2. Different food habits (1) Wasp: The diet of wasps is very complex. In addition to sucking nectar, the adult wasps are also predatory, and caterpillars and small green caterpillars on trees are all their prey. (2) Bees: Bees mainly feed on flowers, including pollen and nectar, and sometimes brew and store them as honey. They pollinate plants when collecting pollen. 3. Different honeycomb materials (1) Wasps: Wasps chew and swallow dry plant material, then spit it out and mix it with saliva to build a paper-like nest. The nest becomes larger and larger. The nest consists of one to several layers of vertically arranged cells with the opening facing downward. (2) Honey bees: Honey bees mainly use the beeswax they secrete to build their nests. The worker bees in the bee colony use the wax they secrete to build honeycombs, ovary covers and feed house covers. The honeycomb is where the bees store food, breed young and live. |
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