Texas Beeworks - Drone bee being born! Here you can see a male honeybee emerging from his cell alongside three female worker bees. You can also see drone brood on the left
![05 May 2020, Berlin: A beekeeper holds a honeycomb with covered drone brood in her hands, which she has cut out of a beehive. The beekeepers remove the drone brood from the 05 May 2020, Berlin: A beekeeper holds a honeycomb with covered drone brood in her hands, which she has cut out of a beehive. The beekeepers remove the drone brood from the](https://c8.alamy.com/comp/2BKY7E7/05-may-2020-berlin-a-beekeeper-holds-a-honeycomb-with-covered-drone-brood-in-her-hands-which-she-has-cut-out-of-a-beehive-the-beekeepers-remove-the-drone-brood-from-the-bee-colonies-to-prevent-or-contain-the-spread-of-the-dreaded-varroa-mite-the-mite-which-was-introduced-from-asia-in-the-1970s-is-oval-14-mm-wide-and-12-mm-long-and-lays-its-eggs-in-the-bees-covered-brood-cells-the-mites-sting-the-young-bee-larvae-and-suck-the-blood-to-feed-the-bee-larvae-are-weakened-by-the-blood-loss-and-are-susceptible-to-pathogenic-viruses-and-bacteria-as-the-bees-hatch-the-mites-also-leave-th-2BKY7E7.jpg)
05 May 2020, Berlin: A beekeeper holds a honeycomb with covered drone brood in her hands, which she has cut out of a beehive. The beekeepers remove the drone brood from the
![Multimedia Gallery - <em>Varroa</em> mites, a deadly bee parasite, on drone brood. | NSF - National Science Foundation Multimedia Gallery - <em>Varroa</em> mites, a deadly bee parasite, on drone brood. | NSF - National Science Foundation](https://www.nsf.gov/news/mmg/media/images/Varra%20on%20drone%20broodafrica.jpg)