I once destroyed a wasp nest - it was just the tiniest thing, about the size of a walnut, suspended inside the chimney of a hurricane lamp on my patio which had, over the winter, grown green with lichens. I had plunged the thing in a bucket of bleach water and the nest, along with the green scum, dissolved in minutes. I was brandishing a towel in case the wasp attacked me, but when I went to replace the dried chimney on the lamp base, I saw the wasp "dancing" about the post searching for her nest. I watched her cautiously as she flitted up and down around and below the unit before shocking me with a dramatic performance depicting grief at a loss. I watched her literally drape herself over the base in a pose reminiscent of the "Pietà (" and it moved me so profoundly that it haunts me to this day.
Yes they do, it is only her that provides ofspring for the hive
Yes and No. There are multiple types of Bees and Wasps. However, although some types of wasps DO make honey, it's not consumed by humans.
do gnats have a king
Wax and honey are not the same thing. The bees make wax to store honey inside. The honey is a separate substance that the bees use for food.
they make the same sound as normal bees just lower
no, one make honey and wasp do not and
no no no
Yes.
No. Honey bees (Apis Meliferra) are a different species.
No, they are probably Bumble Bees or they could be wasps. Digger bees (ground bees) will be different than honey bees...honey bees will be a colony consisting of one nest with thousands of bees...digger bees, may be a colony of dozens to hundreds, but it will be 1 nest to a bee, just many nests in the same area..do note, in arid areas honey bees are known to nest in the ground in old rodent burrows, but once again there will be many bees using the one nest Lar
It depends on the species. Some bumble bees or wasps may. Honey bees that were away foraging will return to where the hive was, but without the queen they can't survive as a colony for very long. If the queen has survived they may make a new nest.
Yes and no. A honey bee is a type of bee, it's a specific type.
Bumble bees are dying out due to disease. They believe it is the same issue honey bees have contracted but the issue is worse with honey bees.
no
The earliest bees evolved from wasps about 100 million years ago -- roughly about the same time plants started producing flowers. Bees and flowers then evolved together. There is fossil evidence proving the honey bee as we know it existed in its current form at least 30 million years ago.