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  2. White-fronted bee-eater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White-fronted_bee-eater

    White-fronted bee-eaters nest in colonies averaging 200 individuals, digging, roosting, and nesting holes in cliffs or banks of earth. A population of bee-eaters may range across many square kilometres of savannah, but will come to the same colony to roost, socialize, and to breed. White-fronted bee-eaters have one of the most complex family ...

  3. Bird nest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bird_nest

    Deep cup nest of the great reed-warbler. A bird nest is the spot in which a bird lays and incubates its eggs and raises its young. Although the term popularly refers to a specific structure made by the bird itself—such as the grassy cup nest of the American robin or Eurasian blackbird, or the elaborately woven hanging nest of the Montezuma oropendola or the village weaver—that is too ...

  4. Brood comb - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brood_comb

    The brood comb is the beeswax structure of cells where the queen bee lays eggs. [1] It is the part of the beehive where a new brood is raised by the colony. During the summer season, a typical queen may lay 1500-2000 eggs per day, which results in 1500-2000 bees hatching after the three-week development period.

  5. Bee brood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bee_brood

    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. As the egg hatches, worker bees add royal jelly - a secretion from glands on the heads of young bees. For three days the young larvae ...

  6. Coraciiformes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coraciiformes

    ɪ f ɔːr m iː z / are a group of usually colourful birds including the kingfishers, the bee-eaters, the rollers, the motmots, and the todies. They generally have syndactyly , with three forward-pointing toes (and toes 3 & 4 fused at their base), though in many kingfishers one of these is missing.

  7. Queen excluder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Queen_excluder

    The purpose is to prevent the queen from moving from the brood chamber to the honey chamber. There she would lay her eggs between storage cells with honey, so that bee larvae or eggs would get into the honey during centrifuging. Queen excluders are also used with some queen breeding methods.

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  9. Bee-eaters in Britain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bee-eaters_in_Britain

    A local gardener captured the female, keeping her in a greenhouse, and she died two days later, after laying a single egg. In 1955, three pairs of bee-eaters nested in Streat Sand Quarry near Plumpton, East Sussex. The birds were first found on 12 June, although the birds' presence only became widely known at the start of August.