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originally posted by: chr0naut
originally posted by: panoz77
Bees in a swarm looking for a new home, I actually witnessed this only once behind my house, really cool to see in person.
Yeah, it usually has to do with hive populations vs hive efficiency. The queen stops givin off her pheremones and does the bolt looking for a new place to establish a hive.
Some bees stay and a new queen emerges, but some follow the old queen to new digs. Reduces the total population in both locations to something more sustainable. Wonder of nature sort of stuff.
By the way, the bees aren't likely to attack when swarming like this. They are more interested in not getting left out in the move.
originally posted by: NoCorruptionAllowed
originally posted by: chr0naut
originally posted by: panoz77
Bees in a swarm looking for a new home, I actually witnessed this only once behind my house, really cool to see in person.
Yeah, it usually has to do with hive populations vs hive efficiency. The queen stops givin off her pheremones and does the bolt looking for a new place to establish a hive.
Some bees stay and a new queen emerges, but some follow the old queen to new digs. Reduces the total population in both locations to something more sustainable. Wonder of nature sort of stuff.
By the way, the bees aren't likely to attack when swarming like this. They are more interested in not getting left out in the move.
I figured you would know a lot about hive mentality. Thanks for not disappointing me.
originally posted by: KansasGirl
a reply to: Rezlooper
Are we sure they were bees? They could have been wasps, yellowjackets, hornets...