46 
THE niVE AND IJONET-BEE. 
“ Such are tlie respective stages of the working-bee 
those of the royal bee are as follows : she passes three 
days in the egg, and is five a worm ; the workers then 
close her cell, and she immediately begins spinning her 
cocoon, which occupies her twenty-four hours. Ou the 
tenth and eleventh days, and a part of t'he twelfth, as if 
exhausted by her labor, she remains in complete repose. 
Then she passes four days and a part of the fifth as a 
nymph. It is on the sixteenth day, therefore, that the 
perfect state of queen is attained. 
“The drone passes three days in the egg, and six and a 
half as a worm, and changes into a perfect insect on the 
twenty-fourth or twenty-fifth day after the egg is laid. 
“ The development of each species likewise proceeds 
more slowly when the colonies are weak, or the air cool. 
Hr. Hunter has observed that the eggs, worms, and 
nymphs all require a heat above 70° of Fahrenheit lor 
their evolution. Both drones and workers, on emerging 
horn the cell, are at first gray, soft, and comparatively 
helpless, so that some time elapses before they take wing. 
“The workers and drones spin complete cocoons, or 
inclose themselves on every side, while the royal larva) 
construct only imperfect cocoons, open behind, and envel- 
oping only the head, thorax, and first l ing of the abdo- 
men ; and Huber concludes, without any hesitation, that 
the final cause of this is, that they may be exposed to the 
mortal sting of the first hatched queen, whose instinct 
leads her instantly to seek the destruction of those who 
would soon become her rivals. 
“ If the royal larva; spun complete cocoons, the stings 
of the queens seeking to destroy their rivals might be so 
entangled in their meshes that they could not be disen- 
gaged. ‘ Such,’ says Iluber, ‘ is the instinctive enmity of 
young queens to each other, that I have seen one of them, 
