1 quen and non female bees
A hive can have between 20,000 to 60,000 worker bees, depending on the season and size of the colony. These worker bees are responsible for tasks such as foraging, nursing the brood, cleaning the hive, and producing beeswax.
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.
All bees in a hive are female. The workers are sterile females. The only time there are males is in the spring when there is a new queen to be serviced.There are usually more than 1 million bees in a hive.
yes, worker bees sting, many people think that they don't but the queen bee does but they are the same type of bees
Female bees (the queen and all worker bees) have 16 pairs of chromosomes (32 chromosomes in all). Male bees (drones) hatch from an unfertilized egg, therefore they only have one set of 16 chromosomes.
Only honey bee workers die after they sting, and then only if they lose their stinger. This is because the honey bee's sting is barbed. All other bees have smooth stings so have no problem pulling them out again so they don't die after they sting.Drones (male bees or wasps) don't have stingers.
Well that depends on the weight of each individual bee, which may vary, also on weather they are male or female, but on average for a honey bee worker would be about 4,800 bees.
The bumble bees are pretty much worker bees. They do many different jobs like; two bees guard the entrance and they polinate.
There are 10,000 20,000 different types of bees There are over 20,000 different species of bees. In every colony of bees, there are 3 different types of bees (the queen bee, the worker bee, and the drone.) Both the worker bee and the queen bee are female but only the queen bee reproduces. The drones, however, are all males. The drones are the one in charge of mating with the queen bee. The queen is in charge of laying eggs, and the worker bee is in charge of cleaning the the hive, taking care of the offspring, and feeding the colony by collecting pollen and nectar.
Under normal circumstances there is only one queen in a colony of honey bees.
This is not quite as simple as just giving a number. Female bees (queens and workers) are diploid -- they have chromosomes from both the mother and father -- so have 32 chromosomes, 16 chromosomes from the queen and 16 from the drone who provided the sperm. Male bees (drones) are haploid -- they only have chromosomes from the mother because they develop from an unfertilized egg -- so have just 16 chromosomes from the queen.
Depends on the HoneyComb Colonyy.(: