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How do honey bees make wax comb?
NARRATOR: Honeybees use several parts of their body to build a honeycomb. Wax for the comb is produced within the worker bee’s body. Other workers chew this wax to soften it; then they add it to the honeycomb. The comb is a wonderful structure.
Why do honey bees make wax?
Why do honey bees make wax? Wax is used by honey bees to construct the individual cells that compose the honeycomb as well as the cells where eggs are laid for rearing young bees.
What is honey wax made from?
Beeswax is made by young worker honeybees. It is secreted as a liquid from four pairs of wax glands on the ventral surface of the abdominal tergites (plates on the underside of a bee’s body).
How do bees make wax?
Bees consume honey (6-8 pounds of honey are consumed to produce a pound of wax) causing the special wax-producing glands to covert the sugar into wax which is extruded through small pores. The wax appears as small flakes on the bees’ abdomen.
How do bees secrete wax?
Honey bee workers have four pairs of special wax-secreting glands on the undersides of their abdomens. From these glands, they secrete liquified wax, which hardens into thin scales when exposed to the air. As the worker bee ages, these glands atrophy and the task of making wax is left to younger bees.
How does bee produce wax?
Around the time a worker bee turns 10 days old, she develops a unique wax-producing gland inside her abdomen. The glands of worker bees convert the sugar contents of honey into wax, which oozes through the bee’s small pores to produce tiny flakes of wax on their abdomens.
How is bees wax made?
How is Bee’s wax made? When honey bees are between 12 and 20 days old, they develop a special wax-producing gland in the abdomen of their bodies. This special gland converts sugar from the honey into a waxy substance and deposits flakes of the substance on the abdomen. The wax foundation can be used wired or unwired.
How do bees produce wax?
How do honey bees make honey?
House bees take the nectar inside the colony and pack it away in hexagon-shaped beeswax honey cells. They then turn the nectar into honey by drying it out using a warm breeze made with their wings. Once the honey has dried out, they put a lid over the honey cell using fresh beeswax – kind of like a little honey jar.