Yes. Some Africanized bees have made their way north into the southern states.
Killer bees are called killer bees because they kill people and other mammals.
Well, Theres killer bees. And honey bees. Honey bees collect food for there family/home members. Killer bees protect the hive and also try to gather food honey bees dont sting. there nice =))
yes
Killer bees can live in Pennsylvania. They are able to live in the majority of the United States, as well as in Africa and Brazil.
Africanized honey bees -- called 'killer bees' by Hollywood and the more sensationalist media -- are the result of some Tanzanian honey bee queens which escaped from a research establishment in Brazil in 1957 and mated with local drones. They formed feral (wild) colonies which have slowly spread southwards to the limits of tropical South America and northwards to the southernmost states of the US. They are unlikely to spread too much further because they don't tolerate cold winters.
The population of killer bees in the United States is in the upper millions. In June, 2013, 100,000 killer bees invaded a vacant home in Houston, Texas. Killer bees are expanding across the US at an alarming rate each year.
Killer bees are called killer bees because they kill people and other mammals.
aggressive honey bees
The leading killer of bees is diseases; the collective noun is a catalog of diseases.The next important killer of bees is mites; the collective noun is an infestation of mites.Another killer of bees is wasps; the collective noun is a colony of wasps, or a nest of wasps.
no
They can kill you!
yes
Rio Grande Valley Killer Bees was created in 2003.
yes
yes
Well, Theres killer bees. And honey bees. Honey bees collect food for there family/home members. Killer bees protect the hive and also try to gather food honey bees dont sting. there nice =))
yes