A Swarm.----A collection of bees is also called a colony.
A collection of bees inside a space is called a hive. If they collect outside, such as on a tree branch or the side of a building, they are called a swarm
A collection of bees is usually called a colony. A hive of bees generally refers to the bees in their home. When a bee colony has split and half of the original colony are looking for a new home that collection is called a swarm.
The standard term is a colony of bees. However we tend to refer to them more frequently according to where/how we find them living, such as: a hive of bees, a nest of bees, a swarm of bees.
A hive, and a collection of hives is called an apiary.
A place where bees are kept, usually a collection of beehives.
An apid is a member of the Apidae, a large family of bees, including honey bees, stingless bees, carpenter bees, orchid bees, cuckoo bees, and bumblebees.
An apid is a member of the Apidae, a large family of bees, including honey bees, stingless bees, carpenter bees, orchid bees, cuckoo bees, and bumblebees.
Only honey bees (Apis Mellifera) live in large colonies of up to 80,000 bees because they work as a team and are known as social bees. Other bees live individually or in small groups and are known as solitary bees.
Ashurbanipal had a large collection of books.
A beeswarm is a swarm of bees, a large crowd of bees descending on something at one time.
Bees will not be able to live in bottles for very long. Even a large bottle is unlikely to be large enough for them to create a honeycomb and have a colony large enough to be viable.