By stinging anyone who goes near it.
By stinging anyone or anything that they see as being a threat to the hive.
The purpose of the stingers that bees have is for self-defense. Bees use their stingers to protect themselves and their hive from potential threats.
Yes, bees typically reuse the same hive for several seasons. The hive serves as their home where they store honey, raise their young, and communicate through intricate dances. Bees continuously maintain and protect their hive to ensure the survival of their colony.
Worker bees make honey and protect the hive from danger.
Bees can kill each other for various reasons, such as competition for resources, territory, or mating opportunities. In some cases, bees may also engage in aggressive behavior to defend their hive or queen from intruders or outsiders. Additionally, in a colony, worker bees may eliminate weaker or diseased individuals to ensure the overall health and survival of the hive.
Bees within one hive can communicate with bees from another hive through scent trails, which they use to signal the location of food sources or new hive locations. This communication enables bees to share information and resources with bees from different hives within the same colony.
Bees
Where bees bring pollen is called a "hive." The hive is their home and the place where they store pollen, honey, and raise their young bees.
A hive is a home in which bees are kept.
A bee hive isn't hexagonal. The cells that bees make from wax inside a bee hive are hexagonal and the bees use these cells to raise young bees and to store honey and pollen.
The noun 'hive' is a collective noun for a hive of bees and a hive of oysters.