There are bees in every country where the climate is warm enough for them (they need summer temperatures of at least 15oC/58oF) for long enough for them to gather enough food for the rest of the year; and they need nectar bearing plants to be available when they are foraging. These two factors are the real limitation to whether they can survive.
Bees originally were native to Asia and Europe. Honey bees have been farmed by man for thousands of years, so early settlers to the Americas and Australasia took bees with them, and inevitably some of these became feral and founded the wild bee colonies there.
Honey bees live in a hive, bumble bees live in a nest.
Bees make honey in ALL countries.
bees live in beehives
Of course. Bees perform the same necessary functions in Australia as they do in other countries and continents. Aside from numerous species of introduced bees, there are at least 1500 native bee species.
Christmas is no different for bees compared to other times of the year. If they live in temperate or tropical countries, they continue collecting pollen from the many flowering plants. In snowy countries, they shelter in their hives, and feeding drops to a minimum.
Yes honey bees live in Mexico
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.
Honey bees aren't native to North America but were taken there by the early settlers about 400 years ago.
It depends on the species of bee. With solitary bees they will live alone, but with social bees they live with the colony. Honey bee drones could not live alone because they depend on the worker bees to feed them.
Bees stay in bee hives.
Yes, there are bees in Japan.
Bees live everywhere in the world except for the Arctic and Antarctic.