" This evening I noticed dead larvae on the ground outside one of the hives, along with some dead bees. Some of the larvae looked quite developed--still white, but it was obvious they were maturing. This concerned me so I opened the hive and went in. I am starting with one deep box of frames that were used last year--some had drawn comb already on them. Upon inspection I saw three frames that have brood on them, most of which seems to be drone cells. It seems like it's being laid in a very uneven way and I am concerned that there is not much of any other brood on the frame. I am concerned for a few reasons: A.) I didn't like seeing larvae on the ground, like it has been kicked out of the hive, B.) the dead bees laying among the larvae concern me, C.) I don't like all the drone cells I'm seeing and hardly any other brood in other cells, D.) I really thought I would see more than three frames of brood altogether."
apis63, if you can manage to take pix of what you are seeing it would really help!
1. dead larvae on the ground quite developed and still white...........
were they sorta mumified? if they are in a mummified state......this would indicate chalk brood.
could be 'chilled brood'
could be 'hygenic behavior'
2. mostly drone cells and uneven brood pattern..........
a 'shot brood' pattern? this indicates a queen problem, and if this is the case, your dead white larvae out the front door you are finding are probably
drones?
i am in agreement with lee, i don't think this is a laying worker problem, i just think what you have is a queen problem, and the queen was not good from the start. here's what i would do; contact your local apiary you purchased the packages from and tell them what you are experiencing from this particular hived package and how this queen is laying and what you are seeing out the front door.
imho, i just think the queen that came with this package was not a very good queen. it happens. contact the supplier, have a conversation with them, they should be open to what you have described and willing to offer thoughts, suggestions or offer you a queen replacement.