Open mating with local bees
2
Allow virgin queens to fly out and mate naturally with drones from surrounding colonies within a 5-10 km radius. This approach requires no specialized equipment and lets natural selection favor genetics adapted to your local climate, forage, and pest pressures.
Why It Works
Open mating promotes genetic diversity by exposing queens to a broad drone pool. Queens typically mate with 12-20 drones during mating flights, resulting in genetically diverse worker populations within a single colony. This diversity strengthens colony resilience against disease and environmental stress. Over successive generations, locally mated colonies develop adaptations specific to your region.
Tips
- Maintain strong drone-producing colonies in your apiary to increase the proportion of your genetics in the local drone pool
- Time queen rearing for peak drone availability, typically late spring to early summer
- Avoid open mating in areas saturated with Africanized bee genetics
- Combine open mating with selective requeening by culling poorly performing colonies to improve your stock over time
Created: 4/16/2025, 9:22:02 PM traditionalfree
None
Related content
- Education and outreach solution
- Introduce a purchased mated queen solution
- Gentle frame removal solution
- Allow the colony to raise an emergency queen solution