The hornet's nest is the wasp's hive. The hornet's nest is the place where wasps inhabit, breed, store, live and overwinter, and it is the general name of empty spleen, honey spleen, pink spleen, daughter spleen, bee path and the internal space of the hive.
Honeycomb, also known as beehive, is the place where wasps inhabit, breed, store, live and live through the winter. It is the general name of empty spleen, honey spleen, pink spleen, daughter spleen, bee path and the internal space of beehive. Honeycomb, or nest spleen, is a wax-like structure made of wax secreted by wax glands in the abdomen of worker bees, which is hexagonal and tubular. Honeycombs built by bumblebees (an insect of Vespidae) or related bees of the same genus, or nests including pupae, are called honeycombs in Chinese medicine.
When wasps breed bees, they leave a thin cocoon in the nest room after emergence. With the increase of insect reproduction algebra, the cocoon will gradually thicken, shrink in size, change from shallow to deep, and finally become dark brown, which is the symbol of the nest spleen, commonly known as the nest spleen. A litter of spleen usually needs to be replaced after 1 ~ 3 years. A large and medium-sized bee farm will eliminate hundreds or even thousands of old spleens every year.