The honey bee cycle is: egg, larva, pupa, adult bee - so the larva hatches from the egg, not the adult bee. The larva hatches from the egg after about three days.
The unfertilized eggs of the queen bee hatch into male bees, or drones. Worker bees, or females, and female queen bees hatch from fertilized eggs.
The unfertilized eggs of the queen bee hatch into male bees, or drones. Worker bees, or females, and female queen bees hatch from fertilized eggs.
Bees are born from eggs laid by the queen bee in the hive. Once the eggs hatch, baby bees (larvae) are fed by worker bees until they pupate and eventually emerge as adult bees. The process typically takes a few weeks for worker bees and a bit longer for drones or queen bees.
NO! Bees lay eggs that then hatch into larvae. Birth occurs at hatching! The larvae can develop into nothing other than bees. The birth is not at the emergence of the bee from the pupae stage but when the eggs hatched. A baby chick is still a chicken... a caterpillar is a baby butterfly... a maggot is a baby fly... a bee larva is a baby bee.
Baby lizards will hatch from their eggs in about 3 weeks on average. However it is possible for eggs to take a couple of months to hatch.
The lay eggs which hatch in21 days.
Baby bees are nursed by worker bees in the hive. The worker bees are all female. They feed the baby bees a substance called 'brood', which is pollen combined with nectar to form a sort of bee bread.
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Baby praying mantises hatch from their eggs in the spring.
They had eggs and the eggs cracked and a baby dragon was made :P
The female penguin lays eggs. Then the baby penguins hatch from the eggs.
Yes they do. Yes