Normally, no, the bees will only tolerate one queen in the hive. However, occasionally where the old queen is getting to the end of her laying life, the workers will produce a queen cell and hatch off a new queen. Mother and daughter queens can be seen together for a short period before the old queen disappears. This process is known as supercedure.
There are rarely 2 queens in a single colony and only then as a transitional phase. Usually a queen will seek to kill any rival queen.
Very occasionally an older queen and her daughter may co-exist in a hive until the younger one is mated and laying eggs, but this is unusual.
Usually there is only one that gets fed and develops, but if there are two, then they fight to the death.
They will both die.
The bees will swarm.
no
Queen bees rule the hive.
There is only 1 queen bee in th hive.
Under normal circumstances, there will only be one queen in a hive,
They don't. Queen bees don't normally leave the hive, and there is only one in each hive.
The queen bee is normally in the hive producing eggs which later turn into bees. She is also yes in the hive but telling the worker bees what to do.
Drones (male bees).
in the hive
Usually one
it is the queen bees worckers
When the old hive gets to crowded
All bees in a hive are female. The workers are sterile females. The only time there are males is in the spring when there is a new queen to be serviced.There are usually more than 1 million bees in a hive.
Under normal circumstances, there will only be one queen bee per colony.