The so-called 'killer bees', more properly called Africanized honey bees, are like any other honey bee and have exactly the same life-cycle. So, yes, they do lay eggs.
No. Bees live in hives. They lay their eggs in the hive.
bees Lay THERE EGGS IN A NEST THEY BUILD A NEST AS A SWARM.
no
they lay there eggs by pushing them out and then they are eggs and they put them in a little spot
The queen bee lays eggs. No other bee in the colony does.
None. Bees don't lay bird eggs.
The lay eggs which hatch in21 days.
No, bees, being insects, lay eggs. The eggs stay outside the bees' bodies to grow and not inside like a human pregnancy.
Within the hive, in cells. But it's only the queen that lays eggs, not the honey bees.
No. Killer whales are placental mammals; they do not lay eggs, but give birth to live young.Killer Whales are mammals. As no mammals- save for the platypus and echidnas- lay eggs, instead performing live childbirth, a Killer Whale does not hatch from an egg.
If by "which bees" you mean which sub-species or type of bee then the answer is: all of them. Honey bees, bumble bees, miner bees - the lot. If however you mean the sex or caste of bee then the simple answer is that it is the queen bee - which is a female - who lays eggs. But there is a more complex answer that is more accurate. If we think about honey bees then the worker bees - who are also female - are physically able to lay eggs too. However, their eggs can only hatch into male bees (drones) and their inclination to lay is usually hormonally suppressed when a fertile queen is present.
Yes, female bumble bees do lay eggs. The queen bee lays eggs that hatch into worker bees, drones, and future queen bees. The eggs are laid in cells within the bee colony.