Honey bees live in colonies.
To quote Shakespeare: "To bee or not to bee [social], that is the question."
an insect of a large group to which the honeybee belongs, including many solitary as well as social kinds.
It depends on the species of bee. With solitary bees they will live alone, but with social bees they live with the colony. Honey bee drones could not live alone because they depend on the worker bees to feed them.
bees live in colonies or groups. each colony has a queen bee and a drone bee and many worker bees. the queen bee lays eggs with the help of drone bee and the worker bees look after them.
Bee Group Newspapers was created in 1877.
Yes, the lion lives in a group called a pride.
You need to elaborate more with your question. A group of social insects are when they live together...An example are honey bees.
central Africa
It depends what you mean by socialise. Honey bees are classed as a social insect. They live in colonies of tens of thousands and each bee performs tasks essential for the well-being of the colony. No bee could survive for long on its own. Bumble bees live in much smaller colonies, from dozens to a few hundred; and there are some bee species which do live individually.
A muddy bee is a ground bee. A muddy bee is bees that live in the ground.
The Queen
bumble bee its honey.