Cold.
When a queen bee dies, the other bees in the hive will typically create a new queen. They will select a young larva and begin feeding it royal jelly to develop it into a queen. This process ensures that the hive can continue functioning and producing new bees.
It all depends on how much 'forage' there is for the bees in the vicinity of their hive and the weather conditions during the season. So the amount could range from none at all to 200 pounds.
Spray late in the evening when more insects will be inside the hive.
Many thousands of bees live and work together in what is called a hive. They provide their own air conditioning by moving their wings up and down, at great speed. When the weather is hot, they work very hard, when it's cool they have a holyday.
Not very likely, but certainly not impossible. Bees do not hibernate in the winter, and will leave the hive if the weather is warm enough -- warmer than about 13 degrees Celsius. If you meet a bee in these conditions and you do something to threaten it, then it may sting you.
The best time for bee removal in Perth is in the middle of the day. The reason for removing them from your place is that at the mid-time, all the bees get the nectar from flowers. So, there are very rare bees present in the bee hives.
The noun 'hive' is a collective noun for a hive of bees and a hive of oysters.
The noun 'hive' is a collective noun for a hive of bees and a hive of oysters.
No, they don't hibernate. In cold weather bees cannot leave the hive because if they lose too much body heat they will die. They stay in the hive, cluster together and generate heat by vibrating their wing muscles.
Out of the Hive was created on 1995-04-01.
I assume that you mean 36 on the Fahrenheit scale ie, 4 degrees above freezing. This is just about as low as it can get before bees will not leave their hive. On a sunny day, even when the temperature is this low, bees will leave their hive on an 'evacuation' or 'cleansing' flight rather than use the inside of their hive as a toilet.
The Hive - website - ended in 2004.