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Insect Bracelet HONEY BEE Apis Mellifera Specimen SL78 CLEAR

$10.56  $6.33

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  • Condition: New
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: China
  • Handmade: Yes
  • Insect Type: Bee
  • Material: Resin
  • Modified Item: No
  • Type: Ornament
  • 1000 Units in Stock
  • Location:HK
  • Ships to:Worldwide
  • Condition:New
  • heart Popularity - 3589 views, 512.7 views per day, 7 days on eBay. Super high amount of views. 100 sold.
  • usd Price - Avg: $0.00, Low: $0.00, High: $0.00. Best quality when compared to PicClick similar items.
  • star Seller - + items sold. 0% negative feedback. Great seller with very good positive feedback and over 50 ratings.
Real Honey Bee (Apis mellifera) specimen encased in clear lucite material. The specimen is crystal clear, indestructible and transparent. Safe, authentic and completely unbreakable product put real Honeybee right at your fingertips!<br>Length of the honey bee body is 1.2 cm (0.5 inch).<br>Weight of the bracelet is 10 g and 20 g with packing box.<br>Length of the band is extendable from 14 to 24 cm (5.5 to 9.5 inches). This suits the hands of both females and males of different ages.<br>The color and style of the band/cord/string may be different from the picture as we will use different one in each batch of production.<br>Selltotheworld<br>From all around the world<br>Insect Bracelet HONEY BEE Apis mellifera Specimen SL78 CLEAR<br>Real<br>Honey Bee (<br>Apis mellifera<br>)<br>specimen encased in clear lucite material. The specimen is crystal clear, indestructible and transparent. Safe, authentic and completely unbreakable product put real Honeybee right at your fingertips!<br>Length of the honey bee body is 1.2 cm (0.5 inch).<br>Weight of the bracelet is 10 g and 20 g with packing box.<br>Length of the band is extendable from 14 to 24 cm (5.5 to 9.5 inches). This suits the hands of both females and males of different ages.<br>The color and style of the band/cord/string may be different from the picture as we will use different one in each batch of production.<br>This is a handmade real animal specimen craft. Each one will be a bit different (specimen size, color and posture) even in the same production batch.<br>The pictures in the listing are just for reference as we are selling multiple pieces with same pictures.<br>***<br>Honey Bee -<br>Apis mellifera<br>The Western honey bee or European honey bee (Apis mellifera) is a species of honey bee. This species was introduced to China from early 20th century and has been raised widely around the country.<br>In the temperate zone, honey bees survive winter as a colony, and the queen begins egg laying in mid to late winter, to prepare for spring. This is most likely triggered by longer day length. She is the only fertile female, and deposits all the eggs from which the other bees are produced. Except a brief mating period when she may make several flights to mate with drones, or if she leaves in later life with a swarm to establish a new colony, the queen rarely leaves the hive after the larvae have become full grown bees. The queen deposits each egg in a cell prepared by the worker bees. The egg hatches into a small larva which is fed by nurse bees (worker bees who maintain the interior of the colony). After about a week, the larva is sealed up in its cell by the nurse bees and begins the pupal stage. After another week, it will emerge an adult bee.<br>For the first ten days of their lives, the female worker bees clean the hive and feed the larvae. After this, they begin building comb cells. On days 16 through 20, a worker receives nectar and pollen from older workers and stores it. After the 20th day, a worker leaves the hive and spends the remainder of its life as a forager. The population of a healthy hive in mid-summer can average between 40,000 and 80,000 bees.<br>Pupae of drones<br>The larvae and pupae in a frame of honeycomb are referred to as frames of brood and are often sold (with adhering bees) by beekeepers to other beekeepers to start new beehives.<br>Stages of development of the drone pupae<br>Both workers and queens are fed "royal jelly" during the first three days of the larval stage. Then workers are switched to a diet of pollen and nectar or diluted honey, while those intended for queens will continue to receive royal jelly. This causes the larva to develop to the pupa stage more quickly, while being also larger and fully developed sexually. Queen breeders consider good nutrition during the larval stage to be of critical importance to the quality of the queens raised, good genetics and sufficient number of matings also being factors. During the larval and pupal stages, various parasites can attack the pupa/larva and destroy or damage it.<br>Queens are not raised in the typical horizontal brood cells of the honeycomb. The typical queen cell is specially constructed to be much larger, and has a vertical orientation. However, should the workers sense that the old queen is weakening, they will produce emergency cells known as supersedure cells. These cells are made from a cell with an egg or very young larva. These cells protrude from the comb. As the queen finishes her larval feeding, and pupates, she moves into a head downward posi