They make their homes in trees, trunks of the trees, and in hives they have built. They can also live in rock cavities.
Wild Bees was created in 2001.
Wild bees are quite capable of stinging, but like all bees will only do so either in protection of the colony or if they are frightened. Leave them alone and don't make sudden movements close to them and they will ignore you.
To Wild Homes was created in 2000.
No they make honey. They collect nectar and pollen.
Land clearing affects bees in different ways. Bumble bees and solitary bees may lose suitable places to make their nests, and all species of bees are likely to lose sources of pollen and nectar as the wild flowers are removed.
The terms hives and nests describe the structures in which honeybees live. The former term is applied to the structures that beekeepers use. The latter term never is employed in beekeeping contexts even though it is used alongside of hive to describe the natural homes of bees in the wild.
No, but some bumble bees do. In the wild honey bees would be in natural cavities such as holes in trees.
Bees have been stricken by a mite called Varroa Destructor. Beekeepers treat their bees with various methods to combat the mite but bees living in the wild get no help in their battle against the mite - consequently they often succumb.
flys or bugs or bees
No. Bees are wild creatures even if they are kept in a hive by a beekeeper. They are also social insects and live in a colony with lots of other bees.
mostly bees
They do not have homes. They may take shelter from bad weather in heavy brush or timber to break the wind, but horses do not have nests or dens. They live in the open.