Bees, ants, termites and wasps live in colonies.
The only insects that can truly sting are bees, wasps and ants, and then just the social species (living together in colonies).
Aggregations, colonies and swarms are examples of terms for groups of insects such as bees. Aggregations refer to bees that do not live in colonies, such as hive-dwelling apids. Swarms reference the worker bees that leave an established colony in the spring in company with the old queen.
These are social insects - such as ants, termites and bees.
The term commonly used in Victorian society to describe people in the colonies was "natives" or "colonials." These terms often carried with them a sense of superiority and otherness towards the people living in colonial territories.
Yes because larva are the offspring of insects
Tree living insects eat trees as the insects bite on the leaves and some may even chew on the trees wood piece
some insects are solitary which means they like living in groups
Insects are very helpful to the living world. Insects help to pollinate the flowers in the world, so that more flowers can grow and produce oxygen.
Bears do not eat insects but they may eat bees on the process of eating honey.
ants
Social insects include ants, termites, bees, and wasps.A2 These insects form colonies in which individual members have allocated tasks of benefit to the colony.
Ants are called social insects because they live in colonies, they divide up the work they need to do, and because the generations of ants in the colonies overlap. Honeybees are also social insects.