Abstract
The drone honey bee develops from unfertilized or fertilized eggs depending
on the homozygosity of the sex alleles in inherited genomic content. In the honey bee
colony, if the polyandrous queen honey bee mates with the drone honey bees of the
neighbouring colonies, then the drones develop from the unfertilized eggs, confirming
the haploid parthenogenesis. However, the mating of the queen with the drones of the
same colony accelerates the feasibility of the development of drones, even from
fertilized eggs. In the above-mentioned former case, the drones are known as the
haploid drones, whereas in the latter case, the drones are referred to as the diploid
drones. Generally, the diploid drones are removed by worker honey bees by
recognizing the pheromones coated on the egg surface. The worker honey bees can
remarkably distinguish the queen's drone eggs and the workers acting as pseudo-queens’ drone eggs. The pseudo-queen develops if the colony is queen-less or the
queen is not carrying the required reproductive potential and pheromonal emission.
Drone development takes 24-25 days in total, with four distinct phases: egg, larval,
pupal, and adult, with durations of 3 days, six days, 15-16 days, and about 1-3 months,
respectively. The present chapter is attributed to the drone honey bees' developmental
synchronicity, haploid inheritance, parthenogenesis, and patrilineal genomic
contribution to the colony that influences colonial behaviour, productivity, life span,
immunity, and others.