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Bee Swarm On Your Tree Or Bush? Save Money!
A bee swarm is a glob of bees hanging from vegetation, usually a tree
or a bush. Swarms form suddenly, and can ball up in vegetation within
3 to 6 minutes. Swarms are transient and form like this to rest the
queen, in their travels, to find an area that they can occupy that has
available water sources and forage. Bee swarms are common in Arizona.
After careful research over the years, we agree with most fire districts
that swarms are not an immediate threat and usually, if left undisturbed,
will pass through an area after they have rested. Resting periods can
last from less than an hour to seven days, depending on prevailing weather
conditions. If a swarm is present for more than this time, please call
us.
Bee swarms are usually non-aggressive, unless directly disturbed. When
they are resting, they will seldom react to anything but direct intervention,
Africanized or not. Do not spray them with insecticides , disturb them
or try to move them in any way. They will leave after they have rested
on their own. Typically they will leave quickly, when they have sufficiently
rested, and move on.
If you have a swarm that has been at a specific location for more than
seven days, and this will always be in vegetation, please call us. Also,
if the swarm is in an area of high public traffic or where you may have
liability and they can be disturbed by others, please call us. Otherwise,
it is safe to isolate them and leave them alone. Swarms will very seldom
colonize in an area they are adjacent to. They search for a structural
cavity that is, more often than not, at least a quarter mile away from
their resting site. If you happen to see movement, and exploration activity
from the swarm to any of your building structures, including your home,
grounds or out-buildings, please call us.
In general,. it is usually safe to leave a swarm alone and wait. It
will save you money and more often than not, statistically, they are
just passing through. Swarms are non-aggressive unless directly disturbed.
We have provided more information about bee swarms in the article below.
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This
is how they infest and take over areas so quickly. Statistics say that
there may be as many as six or more Africanized honey bee colonies in
a city block. An established African honeybee colony is capable of sending
out swarms many times a year if forage is available. Peak periods of
swarming activity are in the spring after winter rains and in the fall
after the monsoon rains.
A swarm is a migrating group of honeybees
composed of a queen, drones and many workers. Sometimes, as they travel,
smaller swarms will join larger swarms to increase their chances of
survival and multiple queens may be resident in the swarm for a short
period of time as they travel. It is common to see swarms move through
an area looking like a dust devil or large moving ribbon, and as they
travel, they make a significant amount of noise. Many people report
that it sounds like a low flying airplane moving through the area. As
swarms periodically decide to rest, they quickly form into a ball, protecting
the queen, on trees or bushes or similar vegetation. A typical resting
swarm will look about the size of a football, or a glob of bees, which
counts about 8,000 to 12,000 bees. Some combined swarms can be much
larger and look like a basketball in size and can, occasionally, be
even larger. Resting will occur after several hours of flying or if
rain or winds force them to hold up in a protected area.
Swarms, Africanized or not, are not overtly aggressive in nature. They
are more interested in survival than in any form of confrontation. It
is very common for people to call us and say they just discovered a
large ball of bees in their bush or tree and it was not there an hour
ago. It only takes a swarm three to six minutes to form at a chosen
resting site, and when they do form, they quiet down quickly as they
rest. There is very little activity until they decide to continue to
move on and then, they leave just as quickly. Over the past several
years, we have studied Africanized honeybee swarms extensively. Our
research indicates that swarms are non-aggressive unless directly interfered
with by spraying with insecticides or attempting to dislodge them or
make them move out of their resting location - they are non-reactive
when they are at rest unless threatened or disturbed. Further, any attempt
to dislodge them may force them to move into a nearby structural cavity,
in order to increase their chances of survival, rather than continue
to move through the area and continue to migrate. Swarms are transient.
Our research indicates that if you see them on vegetation, they will
more than likely continue to move, otherwise, they would have already
chosen to move into you’re house or a neighbor’s house directly.
They deserve watching, but statistically, they will explore areas for
colonization at least a quarter of a mile away from their resting site,
if they are not moving on. A honeybee swarm may rest anywhere from five
minutes to seven days at a particular site. In unusual circumstances,
they may decide to stay at their resting site and build honeycomb, however,
this is usually in pine trees, citrus trees and they will always be
there for more than seven days. If honeycomb is eventually visible,
and it will be, this is a subject of concern and you should call us.
Africanized honeybees are prolific pollinators and deserve our respect.
Aggressive behaviors begin to occur only after the bees have developed
honeycomb, brood and have established themselves in a structural cavity
that they intend to occupy or, rarely in an open exposed colony. It
is their nature to seek out structural cavities that they can easily
defend and occupy. Structural damage will begin immediately if the bees
move into a structural cavity as they lay down a pheromone scent, an
oily urinary secretion that acts as a marker to that particular site
for that specific colony and can be recognized by other bees as well
from as far as three miles away. Additionally, they will immediately
begin to build honeycomb which is highly moisture retentive, will cause
significant structural damage, and will also cause future infestation
problems if not properly handled by a professional. If bees are noted
moving into a structural cavity, or they are seen going in and out from
one, call us immediately to avoid the consequent damage and danger.
Damage can be minimized, if a new colony is stopped quickly, but never
entirely reversed. The longer a colony is left to become established,
the greater the damage and higher the probability of future infestations.
If a swarm has decided to rest in a commercial, or a high traffic area,
and you are uncomfortable with your liability if someone would disturb
them, then call us.
With the advent of so much publicity in the media about Colony Collapse
Disorder (CCD), many people have become concerned about the scarcity
of bee populations across the United States. All honeybee populations
are tremendous pollinators and add to our environment. Africanized honeybees
are now pervasive in Arizona and have successfully dominated domestic
honeybee colonies in the wild - they are here to stay. People in Asia
and Africa have co-existed with the species for centuries. After the
"killer bee" scares of the late 1990s, we have learned much
about them. We advocate, as well as most Fire Districts throughout the
State of Arizona, leaving them alone unless there are potential public
liability issues.
In summary, they are here to stay. Like any other insect, reptile or
wild animal in our Sonora desert environment, we need to understand
their behaviors. Africanized bee swarms are not a serious threat unless
directly confronted or interfered with. On the other hand, African bee
colonies are very dangerous and should not be allowed to establish without
control when around people, livestock or pets and will cause serious
structural damage to commercial and residential structures with a high
probability of future infestation in the general area if left unchecked
to develop on their own.
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