Journal article

The upward tilt of honeycomb cells increases the carrying capacity of the comb and is not to prevent the outflow of honey


Authors listOeder, Robert; Schwabe, Dietrich

Publication year2021

Pages174-185

JournalApidologie

Volume number52

Issue number1

ISSN0044-8435

eISSN1297-9678

Open access statusHybrid

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s13592-020-00807-9

PublisherSpringer


Abstract
The cells of the combs ofApis melliferaare tilted upwards by approximately 13 degrees. The literature says that this tilt serves to prevent the outflow of honey. We checked this by hanging empty honeycombs upside down into beehives. Honey was stored in these inverted honeycombs in the same way as in the normally oriented combs, and inverted combs were also well accepted for rearing the brood. We thus show that the benefit for the bees of the upward tilt of the cells is not to prevent leakage of honey. Honey is obviously in a Wenzel state on the hydrophobic, micro-structured cell walls. The associated wetting of the cell wall causes adhesion that prevents leakage. We propose that the benefit of the inclination of the cells is to direct about 10% of the weight of cell contents onto the midwall, thus increasing the carrying capacity of the comb.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleOeder, R. and Schwabe, D. (2021) The upward tilt of honeycomb cells increases the carrying capacity of the comb and is not to prevent the outflow of honey, Apidologie, 52(1), pp. 174-185. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13592-020-00807-9

APA Citation styleOeder, R., & Schwabe, D. (2021). The upward tilt of honeycomb cells increases the carrying capacity of the comb and is not to prevent the outflow of honey. Apidologie. 52(1), 174-185. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13592-020-00807-9



Keywords


honeycomb architectureleakage of honeyupward inclined cellsweight carrying capacity of the combwetting of cell walls by honey


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Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 11:16