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No, because groups of ants, bees, wasps, and termites are all very protective of their homes and others in their territory.
These are social insects - such as ants, termites and bees.
Bees, ants, termites, hornets, and even naked mole rats live in colonies.
Bees, ants, termites and wasps live in colonies.
Bees are one example of a social insect that lives in colonies. Ants are another common example. Both types of insect have queens and various types of workers.
Social insects include ants, termites, bees, and wasps.A2 These insects form colonies in which individual members have allocated tasks of benefit to the colony.
Ants live in a 'formicary'. Bees live in a 'colony'. Termites live in 'mounds'.
ants, termites, and wasps
honey bees (apis mellifera) are kept in hives in an apiary.
All ants are in the order Hymenoptera. That is the order of ants, bees, wasps and sawflies. People who know no better also call termites "white ants", but that is a bad name, because termites are nearly as different from ants as it is possible to be and still be an insect. Termites are more like cockroaches than ants.
ants, bees, wasps
There are many insects that are attracted to rotting wood. This includes termites, ladybugs, carpenter ants, and powder post beetles.