Only one queen to a hive. If two queens are born at the same time, they will fight until one is dead.
There can only be one queen in a bee colony.
There is only one queen bee in each hive.
One to every beehive. I doubt that anyone knows how many beehives there are on earth.
Under normal circumstances, just one.
1 the queen bee2 the king bee3 the princess bee4 the prince bee
Under normal circumstances there is only one queen in a colony of honey bees.
If a queen dies, then the worker bees will feed royal jelly to some of the larvae and they will turn into queen bees. The first one out will kill all the others, so there will only be one Queen Bee in the hive. This is still a dead end until the queen finds a drone, mates and gets down into the business of egg laying.
One to every beehive. I doubt that anyone knows how many beehives there are on earth.
The beehive holds 200 bees. Now I don't know if they will die off and need to be replaced, but you need 200 bees to fill the hive. You can either buy them or get them from friends as gifts. Your hive also needs one queen bee. The hive will not hold more than one queen.
The number of bees in a hive varies through the year. At the end of winter there will probably be around 10,000 bees, but in mid-summer there could be around 60,000 bees.
In a beehive, only the drone bees are male and they are only produced in sumer. All the reset of the bees are female and all but one of these bees (called worker bees) are effectively sterile. The bee which is the mama of the hive, the one which lays all the eggs is called the "Queen" bee.
In a honey bee hive there will be one queen, several hundred drones (males) and all the others (up to 80000) will be workers (infertile females).
Usually one
Normally just one.
Under normal circumstances, there will only be one queen in a hive,
Under normal circumstances, just one.
Under normal circumstances, there will only be one queen bee per colony.
The queen bee of the colony lays the bees
Under normal circumstances, only one.