Bees are still around but they are slowly dying off because of a disease
Given that there can be over 50,000 bees in a hive in Summer, this seems very unlikely. Bees look out for the colony as a whole and not to individuals.
This is a silly question. If you have a hive of bees then they don't fly south for the winter. they make honey to live on during winter time >>. they stay at home.
Because the flowers that the Bees collect pollen from and produces the nectar that the Butterflies eat is simply not there from being choked out by the weeds. Pull the weeds and the Bees, Butterflies and Hummingbirds will come back.
Honey does not come out of a bee's body. Bees collect nectar from flowers and take it back to the hive where it is spread in cells in the honeycomb. The combination of warmth and air flow in the hive evaporates water from the nectar, and the result is honey.
If you have a beekeeper in the area, they will come and remove the bees for you. If you can't get in touch with a beekeeper, an exterminator can come out and remove the bees. Honey bees are important to the environment, and shouldn't be killed unless it is a last resort.
No, killing one bee will not attract more bees. Bees do not communicate in a way that would signal others to come to the area if one is killed.
Its come from bees
No.
Honey bees produce honey by collecting nectar from flowers using their long, tube-shaped tongues, and storing it in their "honey stomach" to carry back to the hive. Once back at the hive, the bees pass the nectar to other worker bees who chew it and store it in honeycomb cells. The bees then fan the nectar with their wings to remove excess moisture, creating thick, sticky honey that is stored for food.
bees do dance but in a figurative 8 for it bee mates to to recenize that the bees must go back to the hive
Honey only comes from honey bees (Apis Mellifera), not from any other type of bees.
They are Western honey bees, imported by early European settlers.