As someone who has been stung by one, I can definitively say yes they exist. yes this is how a bee loks like
why dont you just go to the other dimension and see for yourself.
No, not all bees have stripes, but many do. IN the United States over 3,500 species of bees exist and they have two sets of wings.
Currently, there have been over 500 species of carpenter bees discovered. However, in the future, there may be more species of carpenter bees discovered.
Hornets evolved from the same common ancestor as wasps, bees, ants and other eusocial insects. They exist because they fill a niche in the environment.
The entire earth is pollinated due to the bees. If they were to disapear from the earth, plant life would cease to exist in less than 10 years. Sustainable life would end.
In an indvidual colony of honey bees (i.e. one hive) the population will fluctuate quite a lot during the year. At its lowest level in Winter it could be 10,000 bees whereas at its height in Summer it could easily exceed 50,000 bees. In the UK there are an estimated 200,000 to 250,000 hives so you say that there may be as many as 125,000,000,000 honey bees around in the middle of Summer. There are of course also other types of bees - solitary bees and bumblebees, for example - that would raise the number higher. As for world population, I cannot help you. One would need to consider the different seasons at any one time and the many tpes of stingless and other bees that exist.
No, not all bees have stripes, but many do. IN the United States over 3,500 species of bees exist and they have two sets of wings.
since dinosaurs
Currently, there have been over 500 species of carpenter bees discovered. However, in the future, there may be more species of carpenter bees discovered.
Extinction. It would mean the end of life as we know it. One out of every three mouthfuls of food depend directly on pollination by bees. Without them this food would not exist.
no because there are tracker jacker bees and other things that do not exist.
Hornets evolved from the same common ancestor as wasps, bees, ants and other eusocial insects. They exist because they fill a niche in the environment.
well they would go insane and kill themselves
it calms bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees bees yes write all of that
The entire earth is pollinated due to the bees. If they were to disapear from the earth, plant life would cease to exist in less than 10 years. Sustainable life would end.
Honey bees currently exist in almost every biome except for the Saharan and arctic and tundra. They also do not live in Antarctica.
Drone bees are sometimes described as cruel because they do not work like worker bees to gather nectar and pollen for the hive, instead relying on other bees to feed and care for them. They exist solely to mate with a queen bee and often die after mating, contributing little else to the hive's survival.
In an indvidual colony of honey bees (i.e. one hive) the population will fluctuate quite a lot during the year. At its lowest level in Winter it could be 10,000 bees whereas at its height in Summer it could easily exceed 50,000 bees. In the UK there are an estimated 200,000 to 250,000 hives so you say that there may be as many as 125,000,000,000 honey bees around in the middle of Summer. There are of course also other types of bees - solitary bees and bumblebees, for example - that would raise the number higher. As for world population, I cannot help you. One would need to consider the different seasons at any one time and the many tpes of stingless and other bees that exist.