Yellow jackets cannot rebuild a nest without a queen. The queen is essential for laying eggs and establishing a new colony. If the queen dies or is removed, the existing workers may continue to care for the nest for a short time, but they will eventually die off, and the nest will not survive. Without a queen, there is no new generation of yellow jackets to continue the colony.
A queen bee,a worker bee, and a droneIn a colony of honey bees there will be one queen, several hundred drones (male bees), and up to 80,000 workers (infertile females).
If a colony of bees goes queenless and the bees are unable to raise a new queen, some of the workers will develop the internal organs necessary to lay eggs but the eggs will be infertile and end up as drones which means that the colony will eventually die. There is no way of recovering from this. If you try to introduce a new queen, the laying workers will kill her.
If a queen dies, then the worker bees will feed royal jelly to some of the larvae and they will turn into queen bees. The first one out will kill all the others, so there will only be one Queen Bee in the hive. This is still a dead end until the queen finds a drone, mates and gets down into the business of egg laying.
The queen bee is responsible for laying eggs. Worker bees feed the young bees and look after them until they are able to take their place in the hive.
It cannot be done without a queen ant and male ants. The queen lays all the eggs. The workers and soldiers are sterile.
A honey bee queen is an egg-laying machine.
No, the queen won't sting workers. The only thing a queen will directly attack is another queen.
When a queen lays an egg she chooses whether or not to ferilize it from her store of sperm in the spermetheca. If the egg is fertilized the developing bee will be female (queen or worker) and if not it will be male (drone). If the queen runs out of sperm, either through age or because she was not properly mated in the first place, she cannot fertilize the eggs so is only capable of producing unfertilized drone eggs.A variation of this is the laying worker. If a colony becomes queenless for any reason and the workers don't succeed in raising another queen to replace her, the lack of 'queen substance' (pheromones from the queen) will cause the workers' ovaries to start developing. Eventually some will start laying eggs but because workers never mate these eggs cannot be fertilized and the result is more drones.
Social insects that live in colonies have three types of members: the queen, the drones, and the workers. Workers are born from asexual eggs produced by the queen, so that the workers are each other's clones, and work for the benefit of the colony without ever reproducing.
First, hornets are not bees, they are a variety of wasp.If a hornet colony loses its queen there will be no-one laying eggs, so the colony will eventually die out as the older workers are not being replaced.
Although worker bees are also female, they are sterile because they don't mate with drones. Normally a queen emits a pheromone which inhibits workers from egg-laying. If the queen dies, after a few days some workers may start to lay eggs, but these can only hatch into drones.