Yes
"Bumblebees are social insects that are characterized by black and yellow body hairs, often in bands." -Wikipedia
Yes. It has three body sections (head, thorax and abdomen) and six legs so is in the class insecta. It is in the order hymenoptera, same as honey bees, wasps, ants and sawflies.
Such species as the amoeba reproduce by cell division. No interaction between two amoebas is necessary or even possible.
Nearly all flying insects pollinate. The best known are bees. Wasps are also extremely important in pollination. Some fruits and flowers are pollinated by almost any flying insect, while others can only be served by one specific bug. For example, there are 27 species of dates. Each species has a unique wasp that pollinates it. Some plants don't need insect pollination. Instead, they throw out large quantities of pollen for the wind to carry to others of their kind. Pine trees are one example.
the insect that goes to that flower will go to another flower. but if a bee goes to a flower with another bee on it that bug will let the other bee in to get pollen
The smallest calcerous skeleton is likely from diatoms...the smallest vertibrate skeleton is from the bumble-bee bat. Exoskeleton the fairyfly.
Not really. They can walk, of course, but they usually fly when outside the hive.
A bumble bee is an insect.
He Was Famous For The Bumble Bee
bumble bee
a bumble bee
Xylocopa violacea, Violet Carpenter Bee
A carpenter bee, thus the name. See the related link for more information.
Bumble bee.
Yes. The phylum arthropoda includes the sub phylum insecta and a bumble bee is an insect
Bumble bee is a camaro
The bumble fee is in the Apidae family. The order of the bumble bee is Hymenoptera.
Almost anything can kill a bumble bee.
The bumble bee queen lays eggs, but none of the other bumble bees in the colony do.