Yes to find a new place to build a hive when the old one is no longer viable.
Usually the bees who leave their hive are gatherers who collect pollen to make honey comb. Though the queen will leave to do her mating dance with the drone bees.
Drones (male bees).
it is the queen bees worckers
Yes, in the winter when it is too cold for them to leave their hive.
A queen bee will leave the hive a couple of days after she emerges from the brood cell in order to mate with several (up to 15) drones. She will then return to the hive and will not leave it again unless with a swarm, looking for a new home.
They don't. Queen bees don't normally leave the hive, and there is only one in each hive.
Usually the bees who leave their hive are gatherers who collect pollen to make honey comb. Though the queen will leave to do her mating dance with the drone bees.
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,
You can't if there is brood there. You would have to trap her in a queen cage and put her in the new hive, then transfer as many of the other bees as possible. If the new hive is kept very close to the old site the remaining bees should go to the new hive by themselves within a few hours.
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
in the hive
Usually one
it is the queen bees worckers