Well in an honest saying I think it will. Mostly because people say when you go into a pond of water bees will stop following you. But that's all I know.
Bees will instinctively swarm around their current queen. A swarm of reporters descended on the mayor's office after the announcement.
For honeybees, probably around 20,000 workers and one queen, but if it is a secondary swarm, or cast, there could be far fewer.
Disperse is defined as the transfer of a seed or fruit from the parent plant to other places where the seed may germinate.
It dispersed by wind.
yes, worker bees sting, many people think that they don't but the queen bee does but they are the same type of bees
One of the better ways of removing a swarm of bees is smoke. Another way is to ask a local beekeeper to help remove the queen if she is accessible. If the queen is removed from a colony, the rest will disperse or follow the queen.
Examen = swarm, as in a swarm of bees Fervere = To swarm, as a verb.
Bees generally swarm. So you might say a huge swarm, or a gigantic swarm.
A couple were hiking when they encountered a swarm of bees in their path.
Usually about half of the bees in the hive leave in a swarm. The average hive can peak at around 60,000 bees, so it is reasonable to expect a swarm to be anything up to about 30,000 bees.
The swarm of bees chased the young girl as she screamed and ran.
It is - as in a swarm of bees
A swarm of bees or colony of bees
There are multiple ways to catch a swarm of bees. One way to catch a swarm is to use a smoker.
"Swarm" is a collective noun and takes a singular verb. Although many bees make a swarm, it is meant to be taken as one whole. The correct sentence is, "There was a swarm of bees (chasing me)." The sentence could be rearranged to read, "A swarm of bees was chasing me." See the related link for subject/verb agreement rules. Rules 3, 4, and 18 address this question.
Buttercups disperse their seeds with... bees
A Swarm.----A collection of bees is also called a colony.