Usually, no- they seem to be distasteful to most birds.
Yes a dormouse will eat a bee, but normally only dead bees or insects that are found on the ground. They will also eat eggs and baby birds on occasion.
Bee eaters that go up and eat bees are near-passerine birds that fall under the Meropidae family and include the Blue-bearded Bee-eater, the Green Bee-eaters, and many others.
There is the Northern Mockingbird, the bee-eaters of the old world, and the olive-sided Flycatchers.
birds
Honeyguides birds and honey badgers have a relationship of mutalism. They both benefit from the relationship. Honeyguide birds show the Badgers where the beehives are. The Badgers break them open to eat the honey and bee larvae, and they leave scraps which the birds can eat.
Birds don't hate bees. Apart from a very few exceptions, they won't eat them, but that's probably more to do with appearance and taste than hatred.
tanagers,robins,mockingbirds,catbirds,thrashers. and if the wasp wants to he or she can sting them
Mostly birds.
Yes.
Badgers are the biggest threat to bumble bees, digging up their nests for the larvae. They are also prey to many birds, as well as larger insects. Skunks will also eat bumble bees.
Birds, mammals, and insects such as spiders and wasps are known to eat bees. In particular, birds like bee-eaters and woodpeckers are specialized in consuming bees.
The bee hummingbird.