Miscellaneous animal pests of colonies

Signs or indications

Non-honey bee inhabitants of hives or critters killing forager honey bees outside the hive. Animals may cause damage to hives or to bees.

Description

There are a number of relatively non-serious honey bee pests and commensals that might be found within the hive, in the debris at bottom of hive, outside the hive, or at or around flower foraging sites. Animals might tip over the hive to gain access or by accident.

Arthropods such as spiders, wasps, roaches, earwigs, flies, beetles, predaceous flies, scorpions, mites including ticks, among others, may be commonly encountered on frames, in bee hives, or in debris at the bottom board or around a hive.

Other animals, including small mammals, birds, reptiles, or amphibians, might also occur in or around bee hives. They may include bees in their diet or scavenge dead bees and brood discarded by a colony.

See Honey Bee Biology and Beekeeping (by Caron and Connor; Resources below) or other common textbooks on bees/beekeeping for descriptions of such pests. Most are not serious pests and as scavengers they play a useful role.

See also

ants, bee louse, skunks, hornets and wasps, yellowjackets, small hive beetle, and wax moth

Resources

CAPA. 2019. Honey Bee Diseases & Pests, Third Edition. Canadian Association of Professional Apiculturists. Accessed 2023. https://capabees.com/capa-honey-bee-diseases-and-pests-3rd-edition/

Caron DM and Connor LJ. 2022. Honey Bee Biology and Beekeeping, Third Edition, Chapter 23. Wicwas Press, Kalamazoo, MI, US. 480 pages.

 earwig; photo courtesy Joseph Berger, Bugwood.org
earwig; photo courtesy Joseph Berger, Bugwood.org
 Cockroach adult, American; photo by Dewey M. Caron
Cockroach adult, American; photo by Dewey M. Caron
 Scorpion inside top cover of hive; photo by University of Florida
Scorpion inside top cover of hive; photo by University of Florida
 Skunk visiting colony at night; note digging evidence and scratch marks on colony; photo by University of Delaware
Skunk visiting colony at night; note digging evidence and scratch marks on colony; photo by University of Delaware
 Woodpecker damage to hive; photo by University of Delaware
Woodpecker damage to hive; photo by University of Delaware
 Spider webbing among un-hatched brood cells from comb in storage; photo by The BeeMD photo collection
Spider webbing among un-hatched brood cells from comb in storage; photo by The BeeMD photo collection
 Moth in hive (probably wax moth); photo by Robert Snyder
Moth in hive (probably wax moth); photo by Robert Snyder
 Fly maggot in bee hive; photo by Dewey M. Caron
Fly maggot in bee hive; photo by Dewey M. Caron
 Crab spider about to grab a forager on Sedum; photo by Kathy Keatley Garvey
Crab spider about to grab a forager on Sedum; photo by Kathy Keatley Garvey
 Larger bodied dragonflies may prey on flying bees; photo by Kathy Keatley Garvey
Larger bodied dragonflies may prey on flying bees; photo by Kathy Keatley Garvey