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  2. Adhesive bandage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adhesive_bandage

    An adhesive bandage, also called a sticking plaster, sticky plaster, medical plaster, or simply plaster in British English, is a small medical dressing used for injuries not serious enough to require a full-size bandage.

  3. Queen bee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Queen_bee

    The queen cell cups are placed inside of a cell-building colony. [17] A cell-building colony is a strong, well-fed, queenless colony that feeds the larva royal jelly and develops the larvae into queen bees. [18] After approximately 10 days, the queen cells are transferred from the cell building colony to small mating nuclei colonies, which are ...

  4. Band-Aid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Band-Aid

    Band-Aid is a brand of adhesive bandages distributed by the consumer health company Kenvue, spun off from Johnson & Johnson in 2023. [3] Invented in 1920, the brand has become a generic term for adhesive bandages in countries such as the United States, Canada, Australia, and others.

  5. Queen excluder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Queen_excluder

    New queens can be killed by the hive. Therefore, the death of a queen in winter is dangerous for a hive and can be expensive for a beekeeper. Queen excluders are used with some queen breeding methods, especially as a way to allow queen cells to be built in the same hive with an existing queen, or as a way to house multiple queens in the same hive.

  6. Schwarziana quadripunctata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schwarziana_quadripunctata

    Queen cells are typically located near the edge or periphery of the comb while worker and dwarf queen cells are randomly aggregated towards the center. Although less than one percent (1%) of dwarf queens were seen to emerge from worker cells, they account for nearly eighty-six percent (86%) of the total queen population.

  7. Bee brood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bee_brood

    In each cell of honeycomb, the queen lays an egg, gluing it to the bottom of the cell. The queen tends to lay brood in a circular or oval pattern. At the height of the brood laying season, the queen may lay so many eggs per day, that the brood on a particular frame may be virtually of the same age.

  8. Wax foundation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wax_foundation

    Most foundation being stamped with cells measuring 5.4 millimetres (0.21 in) while the naturally built worker cell measures 4.6 millimetres (0.18 in) to 5.1 millimetres (0.20 in) that leads to an increase of a linear increase of 110% of the original size and a volume increase of 157% of the original size.

  9. BS National Beehive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BS_National_Beehive

    In its original form, the National hive provides 3 ⁄ 8 in (9.5 mm) bottom beespace—that is, the top surface of the frame bar is flush with the top of the box, and the lower surface of the frame is one bee space above the bottom of the box. Thus, when two boxes are stacked atop one another, there is exactly one beespace vertically between ...