A comparison of three queen rearing techniques to improve sustainable small-scale beekeeping in the northeastern United States

authored by Hannah R. Whitehead, Ang Roell, Samuel A. Comfort III, Bi Kline, Lynn S. Adler

Winter losses of honey bee colonies in the United States can be very high; small-scale beekeepers in northern states frequently lose 50% or more of their colonies over the winter. To replace their losses, beekeepers often buy bees and queens from southern states. However, queens reared from northern-adapted stock may survive better in northern climates, and transporting queens from non-local regions can increase pest and pathogen spread and affect local population structure and genetic diversity. Rearing local queens could improve northern beekeeping sustainability, but traditional queen rearing (10-day grafting) requires specialized knowledge and resources, making it inaccessible to many beekeepers. We compared the efficacy of 10-day grafting to two more accessible queen rearing methods: 1) a novel 48-h technique, which is an abbreviated version of 10-day grafting, and 2) walk-away splits, in which a beekeeper simply splits one colony into two and leaves the queenless colony to rear a new queen. We reared approximately 100 queens using each method and compared queen survival and worker population size, as well as queen size and reproductive characteristics for a subset of queens. We found no significant differences in queen survival, size or reproductive characteristics between treatments, suggesting that simpler methods may produce queens as effectively as traditional 10-day grafting. These methods can be easily taught to small-scale beekeepers, improving access to local queens that are better adapted to northern climates.

A comparison of three queen rearing techniques to improve sustainable small-scale beekeeping in the northeastern United States