I'm not sure whether the question is '...come to England' or '...come from England', but this should answer both:
Bees evolved from primitive wasps somewhere between 50 and 100 million years ago, probably in what is now North Africa, although the world was very different then. Their emergence corresponded with that of the first flowers, so bees and flowers have evolved together which may account for their close relationship.
The bees slowly spread, southwards to South Africa, eastwards to India (which at that point was still attached to the African land mass) and on into Asia, and northwards into Europe. Until about 10,000 years ago the British Isles were still joined by land to what is now France, and the bees spread into them.
That is as far as they went until Europeans started exploring. Early settlers took bees with them to the Americas, Australia and New Zealand, and these bee colonies swarmed and spread there.
No.
bees come from all around the world (except maybe the anarchic) basically everywhere there are flowering plants.
bees come in the form of groups in different ways e-g a group of bees have made their nest or hive in the ship or any other source of travelling vehicle and when these vehicles travel in other countries or regions they travel from cities to cities.
Bees, being considerably smaller than a rat, can not eat the rat. Nor do rats eat bees.
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.
They came with the colonists that came from England to America. The variety of honeybee is Apis mellifera, the European Honeybee.
England.
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.
Its come from bees
No.
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.
yes, because there are only a few bees in England but if you are referring to the world i don't know.
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.
Bees are still around but they are slowly dying off because of a disease
nope
their mommies?