No...
honey bee's collect honey and are in a hive and are also smaller than bumble bees and not yellow and black...
whereas bumble bee's collect pollen and make their own hives.
hope u understand that a little more now
Sort of. A colony of honey bees (Apis Mellifera) is comprised of 1 queen, several hundred drones (male bees) and up to 80,000 worker bees (infertile females). As their name implies, they do all the work in the colony such as looking after the larvae, keeping the hive clean and collecting nectar and pollen to feed themselves and the other bees in the colony.
No. Different species. Carpenter Bees make a hole for their nest in soft wood. Bumble Bees either nest on the ground, or in a tunnel nest in the ground.
Carpenter Bees do not attack bumble bees.
No. Different species. Carpenter Bees make a hole for their nest in soft wood. Bumble Bees either nest on the ground, or in a tunnel nest in the ground.
No, but carpenter bees do.
Bumble bees are big fat critters. Some times they are mostly black. Carpenter bees look more like honey bees. The tell teal sign of carpenters is saw dust and holes in where you think they are living.
Almost all common bees will do that, honey, bumble or carpenter
There are roughly 20,000 different varieties of bee. The four major groups are * Honey bees * Bumble bees * Stingless bees * Carpenter bees
Because it is a male carpenter bee and male carpenter bees can't sting.
Bumble bees are dying out due to disease. They believe it is the same issue honey bees have contracted but the issue is worse with honey bees.
The carpenter bee injects considerably more venom, simply because of it's size. At age ten, I was stung in the right temple by a carpenter bee. I was a sight to see for the next two weeks. The doctor told me I was very lucky to be alive.
Bumble Bees make their nest either on the ground, or in a hole in the ground, Carpenter bees make a hole in wood for their nest. These also more resemble honey bees in size.
Bumble bees live on pretty much the same diet as honey bees: pollen and nectar (the basis of honey).
Some tropical bees can and the European hornets fly at night.