They can, but they would need constant access to the outside.
Only honey bees (Apis Mellifera) live in large colonies of up to 80,000 bees because they work as a team and are known as social bees. Other bees live individually or in small groups and are known as solitary bees.
Bumble bees are classed as solitary bees even though they live in small colonies of up to 50 during the breeding season.
The walls of a house are never completely "sealed". There are always slots where insects get in and out.
They don't. Worker honey bees live for around 6 weeks in summer and 6 months in winter. The queen can live for about 4 years.
Killer bees can live in Pennsylvania. They are able to live in the majority of the United States, as well as in Africa and Brazil.
A bee's house is a Beehive.
Yes, bees can and do live indoors. Several botanical gardens keep bees.
Bee HiveOnly domesticated honey bees live in hives. Honey bees living in the wild will usually build a nest in the hollow of a tree trunk or under the eaves of someones house. Bumble bees very often nest in holes in the ground.Honey bees can live in a hive or in a hollow tree or in the attic of a house etc.
the house of the bees is called a hive.
Honey bees live in a hive, bumble bees live in a nest.
bees live in beehives
Honey bees live in hives, formed by the bees themselves, usually. Occasionally, however, apiaries, man-made beehives, will house many bees, so that the honey can be harvested.
Yes honey bees live in Mexico
Only honey bees (Apis Mellifera) live in large colonies of up to 80,000 bees because they work as a team and are known as social bees. Other bees live individually or in small groups and are known as solitary bees.
It depends on the species of bee. With solitary bees they will live alone, but with social bees they live with the colony. Honey bee drones could not live alone because they depend on the worker bees to feed them.
Bumble bees are classed as solitary bees even though they live in small colonies of up to 50 during the breeding season.
Yes, there are bees in Japan.