No bees are brown on there legs and hands and they are clear on there wings
no
some have red markings
Bees are blind to red, so to them it would appear black anyway. However, they can see ultra-violet light, which we can't, so visual differences between objects which to us appear either red or black would to a bee depend on the amount of ultra-violet light they reflect.
No, ground bees are yellow and black and about the same size as honey bees
Yes black bees to sting
As altitude increases the temperature decreases. In order to keep warm high altitude bees have developed a black colour which absorbs more sunlight and keeps them warmer.
First of all, WHAT THE HOOT IS A BLACK BEES?
A regular bee. Bees can bee (get it? 'Bee' instead of 'be') red, blue, or green.
Although bees and ladybirds are both insects, there are many differences between them, such as: * Bees live in Hives, Ladybirds do not * Bees have stingers, Ladybirds have no sting, but they do bite * Bees feed on pollen and nectar, Ladybirds live on aphids and other small insects. * Bees live in colonies and are dependent of the social structure, Ladybirds are independent. Bees and ladybugs belong to completely different insect orders and are therefore about as different as crocodiles and hippopotamuses. Bees are hymenoptera, ladybugs are beetles.
Most bumble bees have yellow and black stripes.
Yes, they are usually carpenter bees.
It is difficult to give a categorical answer to this because a bee's colour vision is different from ours. We see colours in the range from red to blue violet, but bees see orange yellow to ultra violet. Therefore bees can't see red. However, a red flower may not appear black to them because it may reflect ultra violet light which they can see.
Yes, there are many bees with stripes that are not bumble bees. Honey bees for one have stripes, along with many other bees, wasps and bee and wasp mimics. Black and yellow and black and white stripes serve as an easily identifiable warning coloration that helps reduce predation on all the bees and wasps that wear them.