One brood box and as many supers as you need.
It varies enormously from apiary to apiary. The main factors are the amount of forage available to the bees in the area and how hard the bees work so it can be anything between nothing at all to around 200 pounds.
Presuming that you mean 500lbs of honey taken off a hive then it would probably represent 4 or 5 years honey production. But it could be more or less depending on the quality of summer weather and available forage for the bees.This is a difficult question for several other reasons:bees are eating honey themselves so some of what they had already made would be consumed in order for them to survive to make more the next year;50,000 bees represents a typical summer colony in a hive but the colony dwindles during the winter months when no honey production is possible;some sub-species of honey bees are more prolific than others.I hope that helps a bit. It is a complex topic so if you are interested please do take the time to read an introductory book for beekeeping - you will find it fascinating.
Bees frequented the daisies the most because daisy pollen has an odor that is attractive to bees.
It all depends on how his development is progressing during puberty. Most boys this age would not be able to produce much semen yet if any at all. Don't worry, you will produce more as you get older.
Do honey bees produce WHAT? If the question is "honey", then yes, HONEY bees produce HONEY. If the question is NOT "honey", I'm afraid I can't help you.
Bees use nectar from flowers to produce honey, the honey badger then feed on the honey that the bees produce.
bees simply produce honey.
honey hence the name honey bees Honey bees also produce bees wax by converting honey.
Bees collect nectar from flowers and then produce honey.
No. Honey is a substance obtained from bees. Bees produce honey from pollen, not nectar.
No, only Bees produce honey.
It is the worker bees that make the honey.
None. Only worker bees produce honey. All worker bees have have stingers. If a worker looses it's stinger it will die.
Manuka honey bees produce Manuka honey which comes largely from new Zealand. These bees feed on the flowers of the Manuka plant in order to produce the honey.
To produce honey.
No. Only honey bees - Apis Mellifera - do that.