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In day seven of the progression image many of the larvae have emerged. The honey pattern is slightly less than the previous day and there is a higher amount of uncapped brood. If you look closely you can see worker bees emerging. When I brought the frame into the lab, there were only two bees crawling around on it, how...
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Day 6 of the healthy bee frame shows that almost all mature larvae have been capped and that new brood are beginning to grow. The capped honey cells are slightly different than before.
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This frame contains a bee disease known as Chalkbrood. This disease is fairly common and affects the bees at the larval stage, killing brood in a matter of 2 days once they are capped. It will not kill a colony but it will weaken it. Notice the spotty brood pattern which is a sign of an unhealthy colony.
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On day 5 of the healthy bee frame progression there is less open brood due to the dillegence of the worker bees.
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This is day four of the healthy bee frame progression. As you can see, the frame has not changed drastically over the weekend although it does look slightly different than before. Many of the cells filled with pollen in the previous images are no longer and there are higher amounts of uncapped brood cells present.
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On day three of the prgression image all the drone cells have hatched. The pollen formation has changed slightly and there is also small difference in the capped honey cell formation.
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This is the same healthy frame from USDA Bee Research Lab in Beltsville. Unfortunately, the frame has not progressed very much due to the fact that it was kept in the lab overnight. Although there was some hatched brood it mostly took place on the opposite side of the frame not shown in the image, however if you look a...
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This particular greenhouse is located inside the Floriculture Greenhouse on the Cook Campus at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, NJ. This 360 degree gigapan only shows one of the many green rooms that this greenhouse currently has.
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This SEM nano gigapan is of three different types of pollen magnified 200x. From left to right, Lilly pollen, some white flower, and a purple flower that's all over this part of California that no one seems to know the name of. This nano was taken at the request of Lisa Adams, a Student Teacher and Researcher partic...
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The yellow part of the dandelion flower with some of its pollen, using the SEM
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