If the queen dies suddenly, the workers will select one or more recently-laid eggs or very young larvae and feed them with royal jelly (a secretion of the workers' hyperpharyingeal glands) and build queen cells around them. These larvae then develop into new queens.
When the first one emerges from her pupal cell she will seek out the other queen cells and sting through them to kill the other queens. A few days later she will go out on her mating flight, and on her return she will start egg laying for the colony.
Another queen takes over. Some species of ants can go about business as usual without a queen though.
Without proper protective equipment, YOU WILL GET STUNG.
Nothing, the bee dies.
Forager bees will return to where the hive was. When they can't find it they will look for a hive nearby (within a matter of a few metres). If they find one they will enter that hive and become one of that colony. If there is no hive nearby, they will eventually die: how quickly will depend on weather conditions and overnight temperature. A beekeeper will try to avoid this situation happening by moving hives in the evening after all foragers have returned to the hive.
The queen bee of a hive does not leave the nest by any means. Without a queen bee, a hive simply cannot exist. If one were to remove the queen bee, it would be a matter of hours before the hive is in complete chaos. In the event the queen bee is about to die, there is already a "lady-in-waiting" to take her place. In simpler terms, the queen cannot be persuaded to leave. It is simply not in their design.
actually, it's the other way around. what happens is quite simple really. the queen bee, who is the only bee that mates and is the mother of the hive, goes on what is called a mating flight and flies out of the hive and begins to fly around. the male bees, which are known as drones, then fly out of their hives and go to where the queen is at and begin to mate with her while flying high up in the air. the queen only needs to mate 5 or 6 times, although she can mate 10 to 12 times. after mating, the male dies. the queen then returns to her hive and stays there, for the most part, for the rest of her life.
Not really. Although the queen only mates once in her life -- about a week after emerging from the pupal cell -- it will be with anything up to 20 drones. She then stores the sperm received in an organ called the spermetheca, and these are used throughout her egg laying life.
The queen bee became the leader because it is usually the big bugs who gets to be in charge.
The have Conflict And Then The Winner Becomes The New Queen.
When the queen leaves her nursery nest she takes a group of workers with her, this is a swarm, they then form their own colony.
When the queen bee dies one of the worker bees feeds a larvae some royal jelly and the larvae becomes the queen
There is only 1 queen bee in th hive.
The colony breaks down and chaos ensues. Without the queen's pheromones controlling what each class of bee does, the colony will attack each other, as the queen's scent fades from the hive.
Forager bees will return to where the hive was. When they can't find it they will look for a hive nearby (within a matter of a few metres). If they find one they will enter that hive and become one of that colony. If there is no hive nearby, they will eventually die: how quickly will depend on weather conditions and overnight temperature. A beekeeper will try to avoid this situation happening by moving hives in the evening after all foragers have returned to the hive.
The Queen
When the queen bee dies, her daughter becomes the new queen.
The Queen Bee. She makes all the honey but the Bee's collect it.
The reason that they have a queen bee is that the queen is the only one that makes the baby bees in the entire bee 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.
The queen bee of a hive does not leave the nest by any means. Without a queen bee, a hive simply cannot exist. If one were to remove the queen bee, it would be a matter of hours before the hive is in complete chaos. In the event the queen bee is about to die, there is already a "lady-in-waiting" to take her place. In simpler terms, the queen cannot be persuaded to leave. It is simply not in their design.