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Happenings in the insect world
Comments:
by Anne E. Schellman
on January 20, 2015 at 1:49 PM
I was in that area this past Friday and wondered what had happened! Thanks for satisfying my curiosity. I moved a bee on the cement/shade into a spot in the sun under a tree. So at least she had a warm "ending." Everyone else had been stepped on from what I could see.
by Kathy Keatley Garvey
on January 20, 2015 at 9:44 PM
Thanks, Anne!
by Gladys Hutson
on January 25, 2015 at 6:09 AM
My husband and I are beekeepers. We experienced this type of thing last winter. We had a cold winter and there was some snow on the ground. It was late February. There were little indentations in the snow where bees had kamikazed into the snow. We were concerned about why this had happened. More seasoned beekeepers assured us that it was older bees that had sacrificed themselves for the good of the hive. They were old and the queen would soon be laying a entire new population for the coming season. Evidently it happens all the time. We as beekeepers just do not witness it when there is no snow on the ground.
 
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