The bees will swarm and leave the hive and look for another source to sustain their colony and build another hive.
When the honey guide bird finds a bee hive with honey, it makes a certain noise. Then the honey badger follows the sound of the bird until it find it, and the bee hive. The badger then breaks down the bee hive and the badger and the bird eat all the honey :) and live happily ever after ;p
The names of all the man made hive components are; slatted rack, entrance reducer, bottom board, hive stand, deep super, deep super frames, queen excluder, honey super, honey super frames, and the inner and outer cover.
female bees make honey and do other things in the hive Answer: With the exception of a few male (drones) in the hive all bees in a hive are female. They do all the work. The only task the males have is to mate with the new queens if the hive swarms or if the present queen dies
The Queen Bee. She makes all the honey but the Bee's collect it.
In a honey bee hive there is one queen, who lays all the eggs; from none (in winter) up to about 300 (in summer) drones (males) whose only purpose in life is to mate with new queens; and between 20,000 and 60,000 workers (all sterile females) who do all the tasks in the hive and all of the foraging for honey and pollen.
In a honey bee hive there is one queen, who lays all the eggs; from none (in winter) up to about 300 (in summer) drones (males) whose only purpose in life is to mate with new queens; and between 20,000 and 60,000 workers (all sterile females) who do all the tasks in the hive and all of the foraging for honey and pollen.
they all make honey and collect it from plants and flowers. also, they live in there.
Almost all common bees will do that, honey, bumble or carpenter
The queen bee gives birth to all the bee's in the hive and she has millions of sons
No. The drones (male bees) don't do any work, and not all of the workers are involved with honey production all of the time, though all workers will at some time make honey. The queen's only task is to lay eggs, and she never makes honey.
They store honey to use as food when the weather is too poor for them to leave the hive to forage for nectar.
Bio-geographical imperative is the reason why the queen honey bee lays all the eggs in the hive. The queen bee may mate with the hive's male members, called drones, and will depend upon the hive's female members, born sterile and called workers, to help raise the eggs in the cultivated hive's or wild nest's cells. The particularly bio-geography promotes efficiency in task completion and protects the genetic transmission of desirable apian traits even though it does so through all members subordinating to one queen bee until she dies or the hive or nest disbands.