yeah they mate and generally they fight for their mates
female bees make honey and do other things in the hive Answer: With the exception of a few male (drones) in the hive all bees in a hive are female. They do all the work. The only task the males have is to mate with the new queens if the hive swarms or if the present queen dies
When she is about five to seven days old a queen will leave the hive on a mating flight. She will mate with up to twenty drones then return to the hive. This is the only time she will mate. Worker bees are all female, but never mate. Drones (males) mate once only, then they die.
All worker bees are female. The males are called drones, who do no work in the hive. They only live for one thing: to mate with a new queen.
A queen bee will leave the hive a couple of days after she emerges from the brood cell in order to mate with several (up to 15) drones. She will then return to the hive and will not leave it again unless with a swarm, looking for a new home.
bees mate twenty feet off the ground doing thirty miles per hr. Fact(Not sure where that person got that answer.) but another answer is the Queen and the Drones mate and no one else, the queen needs to mate with 18 different drones and the sperm will last the rest of he life (2 years) and they mate in the hive, not 20 feet of the ground at 30 mph.Honey bees most certainly DO NOT mate in the hive. A virgin Queen leaves the hive on a mating flight when she is about five days old and will mate (while flying) with approximately thirty drones, all of whom will die after mating. That one mating will last for the rest of her life which can be up to five years. However, beekeepers tend to cull and replace their queens after two years to maximise efficiency. If the bees are living in the wild, they will supersede the queen themselves if they are unhappy with her egg-laying performance.In fact, the latest research shows that up to fifty drones may be involved in the mating of each virgin queen..
in the hive
drones: mate with the queens. queen: mate with the drones make new bees. worker: they build , clean , protect hive , care for young and groom queen.
female bees make honey and do other things in the hive Answer: With the exception of a few male (drones) in the hive all bees in a hive are female. They do all the work. The only task the males have is to mate with the new queens if the hive swarms or if the present queen dies
When she is about five to seven days old a queen will leave the hive on a mating flight. She will mate with up to twenty drones then return to the hive. This is the only time she will mate. Worker bees are all female, but never mate. Drones (males) mate once only, then they die.
The above is WRONG, worker bees are the sterile female bees that do do all the work. The bees that do no work in the hive are the male "drone" bees that the hive produces each summer. They have one function only, to mate with new queen bees.
The drones are the male bees. The queen and worker bees are all female. The only purpose of a drone is to mate with a new queen. Once mating has finished the drone will die. Within the hive, the drones have no function and do no work. As autumn turns to winter all of the drones in the hive will be thrown out by the worker bees and will die. New drones will be produced at the start of the next season.
No,Their job is only to mate with a queen and not usually the one in their hive. In the winter time, they are often kicked out of the hive because resources are scarce.
All worker bees are female. The males are called drones, who do no work in the hive. They only live for one thing: to mate with a new queen.
In a word: nothing. Male bees (drones) have only one purpose in life, to mate with new queens and will be out of the hive looking for queens whenever the weather is suitable. They do no work at all within the hive. For this reason, at the end of the summer all of the drones are thrown out of the hive to die so they are not a drain on precious food resources during the winter. In the spring the queen will start laying new drone eggs for that season's drones.
A queen bee will leave the hive a couple of days after she emerges from the brood cell in order to mate with several (up to 15) drones. She will then return to the hive and will not leave it again unless with a swarm, looking for a new home.
bees mate twenty feet off the ground doing thirty miles per hr. Fact(Not sure where that person got that answer.) but another answer is the Queen and the Drones mate and no one else, the queen needs to mate with 18 different drones and the sperm will last the rest of he life (2 years) and they mate in the hive, not 20 feet of the ground at 30 mph.Honey bees most certainly DO NOT mate in the hive. A virgin Queen leaves the hive on a mating flight when she is about five days old and will mate (while flying) with approximately thirty drones, all of whom will die after mating. That one mating will last for the rest of her life which can be up to five years. However, beekeepers tend to cull and replace their queens after two years to maximise efficiency. If the bees are living in the wild, they will supersede the queen themselves if they are unhappy with her egg-laying performance.In fact, the latest research shows that up to fifty drones may be involved in the mating of each virgin queen..
Drone bees are sometimes described as cruel because they do not work like worker bees to gather nectar and pollen for the hive, instead relying on other bees to feed and care for them. They exist solely to mate with a queen bee and often die after mating, contributing little else to the hive's survival.