| Fig. |
1. |
Worker cells of common East Indian honey bee (Apis indica) |
12 |
| 2. |
Worker cells of tiny East Indian honey bee (Apis florea) |
13 |
| 3. |
Comb of tiny East Indian honeybee (Apis florea) |
14 |
| 4. |
Worker cells of common honey bee (Apis mellifera) |
15 |
| 5. |
Ovaries of queen and workers |
19 |
| 6. |
Heads of queen and drone |
20 |
| 7. |
Modifications of the legs of different bees |
21 |
| 8. |
Head and tongue of Apis mellifera worker |
22 |
| 9. |
Wax disks of social bees |
26 |
| 10. |
Comb building, side of hive removed |
27 |
| 11. |
Cross section of brood apartment |
29 |
| 12. |
Use of veil and bee smoker |
31 |
| 13. |
Manipulation removing comb from hive |
32 |
| 14. |
Manipulation tilting to bring reverse side of comb to view |
33 |
| 15. |
Manipulation reverse side of comb brought to view |
33 |
| 16. |
Manipulation examining reverse side of comb |
33 |
| 17. |
Quinby closed-end frames |
34 |
| 18. |
Box hive prepared for transportation |
37 |
| 19. |
Frame hive prepared for transportation |
37 |
| 20. |
An apiary in Florida |
38 |
| 21. |
An apiary in California |
39 |
| 22. |
Ancient Greek movable comb hive |
41 |
| 23. |
Dadant-Quinby form of Langstroth hive with cap and gable roof |
41 |
| 24. |
Langstroth frame showing construction |
42 |
| 25. |
Form in which to nail frames |
42 |
| 26. |
Lock-joint chaff hive |
43 |
| 27. |
Manner of nailing hives |
43 |
| 28. |
Section of improved tin frame-rest
|
44 |
| 29. |
The Langstroth hive (Dadant-Quinby form), cross section
showing construction |
45 |
| 30. |
The Nonpareil hive |
46 |
| 31. |
Dadant-Quinby form of Langstroth hive open |
46 |
| 32. |
The Bingham bee smoker |
48 |
| 33. |
Automatic reversible honey extractor |
49 |
| 34. |
Quinby uncapping knife |
49 |
| 35. |
Bingham & Hetherington uncapping knife |
49 |
| 36. |
Excelsior wax extractor |
50 |
| 37. |
Simplicity feeder |
51 |
| 38. |
Fruit-jar bee feeder, bottom of feeding stage and
perforated cap shown separately |
51 |
| 39. |
The Porter spring bee escape |
52 |
| 40. |
Daisy foundation fastener |
53 |
| 41. |
Fastening starter of comb foundation in frame |
53 |
| 42. |
Spur wire-embedder |
54 |
| 43. |
Comb-foundation machine |
55 |
| 44. |
Willow herb (Epilobium angustifolium) |
57 |
| 45. |
Wagner's flat pea (Lathyrus sylvestris wagneri) |
59 |
| 46. |
Dwarf Essex or winter rape (Brassica napus) |
60 |
| 47. |
Summer or bird rape (Brassica napus) |
60 |
| 48. |
Sacaline or giant knotweed (Polygonum sachalinense) |
61 |
| 49. |
Russian or hairy vetch (Vicia villosa) |
61 |
| 50. |
Mountain laurel (Kalmia latifolia) |
63 |
| 51. |
Apple (Pyrus malus) |
63 |
| 52. |
Heath-like wild aster (Aster ericoides) |
64 |
| 53. |
Transferring drumming the bees from a box hive into a frame hive |
71 |
| 54. |
Transferred comb and inserted queen cell |
73 |
| 55. |
Uncapping and extracting honey |
77 |
| 56. |
One-piece "V"-grooved sections |
80 |
| 57. |
Super with section holders and sections in place |
80 |
| 58. |
Dadant-Quinby form of Langstroth hive, elevated from bottom
board and slid back for ventilation in summer |
82 |
| 59. |
Langstroth hive with combined surplus case and shipping crate |
83 |
| 60. |
Honey shipping cases |
83 |
| 61. |
Boardman solar wax extractor |
85 |
| 62. |
Comb showing worker brood and queen cells |
88 |
| 63. |
Queen cells and worker brood in various stages |
89 |
| 64. |
The Benton queen cage fur transporting a queen and attendants
by mail |
92 |
| 65. |
Caging a queen for mailing |
92 |
| 66. |
Queen introducing-cage |
94 |
| 67. |
Hiving a swarm of bees |
96 |
| 68. |
The Simmins non-swarming system, single-story hive with supers |
103 |
| 69. |
The Simmins non-swarming system, double-story hive with supers |
103 |
| 70. |
Beehives with Langdon non-swarmer attached |
104 |
| 71. |
Percolator for preparation of winter food |
107 |
| 72. |
The American straw hive of Hayek Bros |
108 |
| 73. |
Davis hive with newspapers packed between inner and outer
cases and brood frames on end for winter |
108 |
| 74. |
Double-walled hive adapted to outdoor wintering as well as
summer use below 40 C north latitude in United States |
109 |
| 75. |
An apiary in Vermont winter view |
110 |
| 76. |
Cheshire anti-robbing entrance |
117 |