I got stung twice this morning while weeding among the branches of a low-growing yew in front of my house. Sunsequent observation indicated an undeground nest of bees, which made me ask the same question. Here's a pretty decent link:
http://ohioline.osu.edu/hyg-fact/2000/2143.html
There are many other sites with similar information, photos, etc.
Bears, skunks and badgers will eat ground bees or yellow jackets. There are also some reptiles with will eat ground bees also.
Bears, and honey badgers. But hornets do not make honey, I assume you mean bees.
Skunks will dig up a nest and eat the larva.
There are many animals that will dig up a bee hive and eat these insects. These animals most commonly include raccoons, skunks, and bears.
Skunks and/or bears love to eat bees and will dig large a round hole at night to get to the nest and eat them as the bees come out to investigate
A beear. It's similar to a bear, but it eats bees.
Animal Weathering is when an animal digs up the ground or smushes a hole into it. I learned this in Science. Hope this helps!!
Many Bumble Bees, Genus Bombus, nest in holes in the ground. I've also mowed over a yellow jacket nest once (ouch), so include yellow jackets in the list. Various other wasps nest in the ground.
It is done by Crawfish or Crawdads. This is why they are called "mudbugs".
Ammonia alone will not kill bees. The most effective way to get rid of bees is to have a professional bee-keeper collect the bees. If that is not possible, pick up sevin dust at your local lawn and garden center. Sprinkle this on the bee hive or nest.
Honey badgers but not found in UK, bears do.
paleontologist
ur dog digs it up
wait until the evening when all the bees are in then pour a cup full of petrol into the hole then block the hole up
If you replant the money you dug up from the shiny spot, a money-growing tree will sprout. If you plant a shovel, a golden shovel tree will sprout. When the golden shovel tree matures, you get a golden shovel which occaisionally digs up money bags if you dig random holes anywhere in the ground.
Honey bees play an important part in nature. Don't kill them off, instead contact your local Animal Shelter and ask if anyone can gather them up and take them off to a Bee Keeper. Or even put an ad in your paper offering free honey bees to anyone who will take them away. Most bee keepers love to do that as they need more bees especially a new colony of them.
No. Because Blue Banded Bees hest up high and Pesticides are spared on crops in and on the ground.
An archaeologist digs up ruins from the past. eg. if you see a fossil under the ground and looks like it's been there for hundredths of years, then a archaeologist will come along and will dig it up and will take it to the museum.