The queen will lay very few eggs in the winter, but in spring the rate of egg-laying will increase as more food (nectar and pollen) becomes available, and will reach a peak of up to 2,000 eggs a day in late spring/early summer, then tail off again at the end of the season.
yes
There is actually a story about making babies called Birds, Bees, Babies in which the birds and the bees make a baby and then the stork delivers it. They use frogs and snails and puppy dog tails. The story is a way to satisfy the curiosity of children who are asking where babies come from. The birds and bees story is called Birds, Bees, Babies and was written by J.L. Sweat.
the birds and the bees :)
the queen mates with some bees and gives birth to lots of mini bee babies LOL XD
No, that is the queen's job. Worker bees work. That is it. No.Incidentally, 'have babies' implies giving birth to live young. This does not happen with any bee -- the queen lays eggs.
The birds and the bees is not a story it is an approlite way of explaining to a child about how babies come into the world. Without grossing them out.
to take care of the babies and store food to survive winter
Bees do not produce babies, they are insects and lay eggs. They do this during most of the year but slow down in temperate latitudes over the winter period.
yes many many bees
A swarm of honey bees can have as many as 25,000 bees in it.
Bees: /bees/ Beehive: bee/hive
The queen is the only fertile female in a colony of honey bees and can lay over 1000 eggs per day.