they have shelter from predators, they make honey for their food, and they keep their pupa larva in the hive.
a bee needs a home, a hive, the hive needs to be where it wont get ruined and the bees have to move to another
Bees are kept in a bee hive (or just hive). For very small colonies that are building up they may be kept in a miniature hive called a 'nuc' (short for nucleus).
Bees in one hive typically do not communicate with bees from another since they usually will not allow bees from another hive to enter their own hive.
Bees
Yes they can. Iactually just saw one the other day.
I'm not entirely certain what you mean. Honey bees don't usually move away from the hive that they were born in except to swarm. The swarming process is the bees way of reproducing. If the hive has become overcrowded - and there are other reasons - the queen will leave the hive with up to half of the worker bees in the hive. They will then cluster on a nearby bush, tree, building etc while looking for a permanent home. As soon as they have found a suitable place, they will all go there and set up a new colony leaving the bees in the old colony to raise a new queen and continue the cycle. There would now be two colonies of bees where originally there was only one.
Bees kill other bees to protect the hive or to steal honey from other hives through a hole in the hive.
A hive is a home in which bees are kept.
A bee hive isn't hexagonal. The cells that bees make from wax inside a bee hive are hexagonal and the bees use these cells to raise young bees and to store honey and pollen.
A collection of bees inside a space is called a hive. If they collect outside, such as on a tree branch or the side of a building, they are called a swarm
The beehive holds 200 bees. Now I don't know if they will die off and need to be replaced, but you need 200 bees to fill the hive. You can either buy them or get them from friends as gifts. Your hive also needs one queen bee. The hive will not hold more than one queen.
The noun 'hive' is a collective noun for a hive of bees and a hive of oysters.