Anything that can get to them: birds, bears, raccons, Spiders, ants, wasps, frogs/toads.
Bears, crickets, birds, ants, grasshoppers, spiders, most cats, dogs, LOADS of animals eat bees.
copied from a post by Ken Burton:
Paper wasps (Yellowjackets and Hornets) are the insects that make these nests. The nest grows quickly during the spring and early summer as the colony grows and several generations of workers are produced. At the end of summer, the queen produces eggs that will develop into the males and females that will leave the nest to mate and start the process over the next year. When these reproductive wasps leave, the life of the colony is essentially over, the few workers left behind don't mount a resistance when the Jays and/or Crows move in to eat the few remaining larvae and pupae. It seems the Jays and Crows know exactly when they can move in and have access to the protein rich wasp babies without getting attacked. The same thing happens to those paper wasps that nest underground, foxes, coyotes and skunks dig up the nests when the season ends.
Bee's eat nector, honey and drink water
Well of course they have to live, so they eat.
Bears, crickets, birds, ants, grasshoppers, spiders, most cats, dogs, LOADS of animals eat bees.
Some types of birds will.
Nobody. Bees have poison in their stingers.
bees and humingbirds
We can
Skunks
An apivore is an organism which eats or consumes bees.
snakes, butterflies, bees
bees
nectar Like honey bees, the blue banded bee eats nectar from flowers.
Hornets eat eat flies, bees, and wasps.
Bees eat pollen and so do lady bugs
Mostly various types of birds.
a rabbit and bees