Professional removal is the way to get rid of bumble bees in wood. The insects in question (Bombus spp) prefer to nest at ground level under a flat, low-lying object -- such as boards, decks, stones, tarps -- or in abandoned mammal holes in the ground. Head-to-toe personal protective equipment and professional equipment and training will be required since bumble bees will avoid confrontations or sting like fury.
Of all the things that I have tried, carbon minoxzide is the only way, I stumbled over this by accident. My out building has a dirt floor and is very air tight. I cranked my lawnmower and for what ever the reason went out of my building shut the door got busy doing something and forgot that the mower was left in there running. Anyway hours later i went back to find that my mower had ran out of gas but from the toxic fumes that had been released it had killed all the bees that was in my building. So now about the first of every year i crank up the old mower sela off the building and gas them.
It's kind of a broad question... A single bumble bee? Or do you want to get rid of the bees in your yard completely?
Carpenter Bees do not attack bumble bees.
what is the bumble bees prey
yes bumble bees do have antennae.
No, they don't. Unlike bumble bees, honey bees die soon after they sting because their stingers have barbs that make it impossible for the bee to remove it, and instead the venom sack pulls free of the body, mortally wounding the bee. Bumble bees do not have barbs on their stinger, making it possible for the bee to remove it's stinger, and sting repeatedly.
Bumble bees can not but honey bees sure can!
These are the ones I know. Bumblebees, Carpenenter Bees, Honey Bees, Parasitic Bees, and Digger Bees.
Bumble bees and honey bees.
bumble bees= honey bees and the ones that pollinate things boring bees= the ones that sting you and then die
All humans, animals, and insects must urinate to remove waste.
Bumble Bees - song - was created on 2000-08-01.
Bumble bees have stings, and will use them if provoked.
Yes Bumble bees are herbivores because they eat honey and nectar