no they live with a family.
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.
Megachilid bees, also known as leafcutter bees. They belong to the family Megachilidae.
There are around 260 species of bee. These can be broken down into groups, for example there are 17 species of bumblebee. These groups include: * Sweat bees * Carpenter bees * Honeybees * Bumblebees * Stingless bees * Africanized bees * Leafcutter bees * Mason bees * Hornfaced bees * Cleptoparasitic bees * Cuckoo bees
Solitary bees live alone and do not form colonies, while social bees such as honeybees live in colonies with a queen, workers, and drones. Solitary bees build individual nests for their offspring, while social bees collaborate to build and maintain a communal nest.
Grass has no nectar and all grasses are wind pollinated, so grass alone is of no use to bees. However, if the grassland had plenty of wild flowers the bees would do well there.
Texas leafcutter ant was created in 1860.
Honey bees live in a hive, bumble bees live in a nest.
bees live in beehives
I get away from them
The sentence "The bees were left alone to work on their comb" is in the passive voice because the subject (the bees) is being acted upon (left alone to work) by an outside agent (unspecified).
Honey bees are 'social' insects because they live in 'societies' or colonies of many thousands of individuals, where each member of the colony performs different tasks for the greater good of the colony as a whole. Honey bees would be unable to survive without the rest of the colony. This is not true of all bees, some bumble bees live a less social life, living alone, or in very small groups.