If there aren't any beekeepers in your area, then you have no other option but to kill them. The most effective and cheapest way to get rid of bees is through the use of bug sprays or insecticides. A can of bug spray does not cost much, and you likely have a can of it lying around in your home already.
No, it is not a good idea to leave a bee hive in an attic. An abandoned hive may attract foraging wildlife (including and other than bees) while a live hive may pose a real danger for domesticated pets and family members.
Bees do not move a natural hive. They build their hive in a specific location and use it as their permanent home. Swarming is a natural process where a new queen and a portion of the colony leave the hive to establish a new one.
Bee hives do not freeze in the winter. Bees slow down and cluster to regulate temperatures inside the hive and survive.
Bees within one hive can communicate with bees from another hive through scent trails, which they use to signal the location of food sources or new hive locations. This communication enables bees to share information and resources with bees from different hives within the same colony.
Bees leave their hives for several reasons, such as foraging for food, scouting for new potential hive locations, or to collect water. Worker bees also leave the hive to perform tasks like collecting nectar, pollen, or propolis. On rare occasions, bees may also swarm and leave the hive to establish a new colony.
Bees
A community of bees is called a "swarm" when referring to a group of bees that are in the process of relocating to establish a new colony. However, a more permanent community of bees within a colony is typically referred to as a "hive." In the hive, there are different roles, including the queen, workers, and drones, all contributing to the functioning of the colony.
Where bees bring pollen is called a "hive." The hive is their home and the place where they store pollen, honey, and raise their young bees.
A hive is a home in which bees are kept.
A bee hive isn't hexagonal. The cells that bees make from wax inside a bee hive are hexagonal and the bees use these cells to raise young bees and to store honey and pollen.
The noun 'hive' is a collective noun for a hive of bees and a hive of oysters.
The noun 'hive' is a collective noun for a hive of bees and a hive of oysters.