<h2><SPAN name="STORING_POLLEN_IN_THE_HIVE" id="STORING_POLLEN_IN_THE_HIVE"></SPAN>STORING POLLEN IN THE HIVE.</h2>
<p>When the bee has fully loaded its baskets and before it returns to
the hive it often spends a little time upon the plant from which it
has been collecting, occupied with the task of cleaning scattered
grains of pollen from its body and of patting down securely the loads
which it has obtained. Upon its return to the hive it hurries within
and seeks for a suitable place in which to deposit the pollen. Some
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returning bees walk leisurely over the combs and loiter among their
sister workers, while others appear to be greatly agitated, shaking
their bodies and moving their wings as though highly excited.
Many pollen-bearing bees appear eager to receive food upon their
return to the hive, and they will solicit it from other workers or
take it from the honey-storage cells. The workers of the hive at
times take a little of the fresh pollen from the baskets of the laden
bee, nibbling it off with their mandibles or rasping off grains with
their tongues.</p>
<p>If the combs of a colony are examined, stored pollen will be found
in various parts of the hive. In the brood frames the greatest amount
is located above and at the sides of the brood and between this and
the stored honey. Cells scattered through the brood from which
young bees have lately emerged may also contain pollen. In the
outer frames of the hive, where brood is less likely to be found,
nearly all of the cells may be packed with pollen, or honey-storage
cells may be found interspersed with those filled with pollen. As a
rule pollen is not stored in drone comb, although this occasionally
happens.</p>
<p>As the pollen-bearing bee crawls over the combs it appears to be
searching for a suitable cell in which to leave its load. It sticks
the head into cell after cell until finally one is located which meets
its requirements, although it is an open question as to why any one of
a group should be chosen rather than another. This selected cell
may already contain some pollen or it may be empty. If partly filled,
the pollen which it contains is likely to be from the same species of
plant as that which the bee carries, although different kinds of pollen
are often stored in the same cell.</p>
<p>In preparation for the act of unloading the bee grasps one edge
of the cell with its forelegs and arches its abdomen so that the posterior
end of the abdomen rests upon the opposite side of the cell. The
body is thus held firmly and is braced by these two supports with the
head and anterior thoracic region projecting over one of the neighboring
cells. The hind legs are thrust down into the cell and hang
freely within it, the pollen masses being held on a level with the outer
edge of the cell, or slightly above it. The middle leg of each side
is raised and its planta is brought into contact with the upper
(proximal) end of the tibia of the same side and with the pollen mass.
The middle leg now presses downward upon the pollen mass, working
in between it and the corbicular surface, so that the mass is
shoved outward and downward and falls into the cell. As the pollen
masses drop, the middle legs are raised and their claws find support
upon the edge of the cell. The hind legs now execute cleansing movements
to remove small bits of pollen which still cling to the corbicular
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surfaces and hairs. After this is accomplished the bee usually leaves
the cell without paying further attention to the two pellets of pollen
although some collecting bees will stick the head into the cell, possibly
to assure themselves that the pollen is properly deposited. It has
been stated by some (Cheshire, for example) that the spur upon the
middle leg is used to help pry the pollen mass from the corbicula.
This structure is in close proximity with the mass while the middle
leg is pushing downward upon it, but its small size renders difficult
an exact estimate of its value in this connection. It is certainly true
that the entire planta of the middle leg is thrust beneath the upper
end of the pollen mass, but the spur may be used as an entering
wedge.</p>
<p>Pollen masses which have been dropped by the collecting bee may
remain for some time within the cell without further treatment, but
usually another worker attends to the packing of the pollen shortly
after it has been deposited. To accomplish this the worker enters the
cell head first, seizes the pollen pellets with its mandibles, breaks
them up somewhat or flattens them out, probably mingles additional
fluid with the pollen, and tamps down the mass securely in the bottom
of the cell. As is shown by the analyses of corbicular pollen and
of stored pollen, certain substances are added to the pollen after the
collecting bee leaves it in the cell. Sugar is certainly added, and it is
generally supposed that secretions from some of the salivary glands
are mixed with the pollen after deposition. It appears probable that
the stored pollen or "beebread" is changed somewhat in chemical
composition through the action of the fluids which have been added
to it, either during the process of collection, at the time of packing,
or later.</p>
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