Yes.
This is a silly question. If you have a hive of bees then they don't fly south for the winter. they make honey to live on during winter time >>. they stay at home.
hive
Honey bees live in a hive, bumble bees live in a nest.
Beekeepers keep bees in a hive and more than one hive is known as an apiary.
A hive
Usually none, all the working bees are infertile females. Only when the hive is about to swarm a number of drones (male bees) are hatched. Around 1% of the bees in a colony during the season are male. Only during winter are there no males in the colony.
A hive is something that bees live in. It can also be "a place in which people are busily occupied."
# in a hive # pollen and nectar
Drones, a queen, and workers are the bees that live in a hive. The drone is a male whose purpose is to mate with the queen or to perish during the winter in the event of not realizing the latter agenda. Worker bees operate as non-queen females whose responsibilities include caring for broods, foraging, and laying eggs which develop into drones or in females in special instances of queen-less hives.
No. Bees live in hives. They lay their eggs in the hive.
It can vary between 5000 in winter to as much as 80000 at the height of the season (May/June in Western Europe).
Hive