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No but they are in lower risk categories of species needing conservation.
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No they are not.
Spotted hyenas are of least concern, brown hyenas are near threatened and striped hyenas are of least concern.
The botanical name for the western honey bee is Apis Mellifera.
No. Honey bees (Apis Meliferra) are a different species.
They build damns which can stop the flow of water.
We only collect honey from honey bees, and there are seven species of honey bee worldwide.
Well, Honey bees and bumble bees are in a certain group that is called Apidae. Andrenidae is a species with mining bees. Ardrenidae is also related to the Apidae species.
Honey bees (Apis mellifera, meaning 'honey carrier', and three other related species). Not all bees, just honey bees. ^^
Bees, in particular honey bees, although nearly all bees make honey in one form or another.
No, but there are many species of honey bees that will crossbreed
A beehive is an enclosed structure in which some species of honey bees live and raise their young, or a manmade structure in which bees are reared for their honey.
These are the ones I know. Bumblebees, Carpenenter Bees, Honey Bees, Parasitic Bees, and Digger Bees.
No. They are very different species, and have rather different colony behavior.
The so-called 'killer bees', more properly called Africanised honey bees, are simply a cross between two species of honey bee, and as such their life cycles and tasks are exactly the same as any other species.
It is a keystone species