Beehives.
There are honey bees in most areas of the world except for the arctic and antarctic.
Honey bees are a type of bee, so honey bees are not bigger than bees in general. Honey bees are a social species that live in large colonies and are known for their importance in pollination and honey production.
Yes and no. A honey bee is a type of bee, it's a specific type.
Honey only comes from honey bees (Apis Mellifera), not from any other type of bees.
A honeybee lives in a beehive in which they constructed. No, honeybees are not mammals, they are insects.
Only honey bees make honey and its taste will depend on the type of flowers, shrubs, trees or other vegetation that the bees have been foraging on.
There isn't another type of honey.
honey bees. i looked it up
Africanized honey bees also known as colloquially
A honey bee is a type of bee that is well-known for its role in pollination and honey production. They live in colonies with a queen, worker bees, and drones, and are vital for maintaining biodiversity and ecosystem balance. Honey bees play a crucial role in agriculture by pollinating crops and plants.
Honeybees are the main type of bees that make honey. They collect nectar from flowers, store it in their hive, and transform it into honey through a process of dehydration and enzyme activity. Other types of bees, like bumblebees, also produce a form of honey but in much smaller quantities.
Well, Honey bees and bumble bees are in a certain group that is called Apidae. Andrenidae is a species with mining bees. Ardrenidae is also related to the Apidae species.