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by JenBarb 3188 days ago
I come from a family of beekeepers and I had no idea that all larvae eat royal jelly early on. That's pretty neat!
1 comments

There has been interesting research over the last couple years on this topic. It is in fact not royal jelly that pushes female bees down the queen development path, but rather the addition of honey and pollen that stops them from becoming queens. Feeding beebread to female larvae is what alters their gene expression to less developed ovaries, because of a specific plant chemical, where they would all normally develop into queens.

DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.1500795

Does that mean you can mass-produce queens by separating them from the hive and continuing to feed them the jelly?
Yes, people do Queen-farm by doing exactly that. Then they sell them for Re-Queening that many commercial beekeepers do to reduce the risk of queen loss after the first year (normally they live 2-4 years).