Drones (male bees).
Only one queen to a hive. If two queens are born at the same time, they will fight until one is dead.
The attendants in a group of bees are responsible for caring for the queen bee, feeding developing larvae, cleaning the hive, and regulating temperature and ventilation within the hive. They also assist in grooming and feeding other adult bees.
it is the queen bees worckers
All bees in a hive are female. The workers are sterile females. The only time there are males is in the spring when there is a new queen to be serviced.There are usually more than 1 million bees in a hive.
Queen bees are not rare within a colony, as every hive contains one queen responsible for laying eggs and leading the colony. However, finding a queen bee outside of a hive in the wild may be considered rare due to their specific role and location within the colony.
Queen bees rule the hive.
There is only 1 queen bee in th hive.
Under normal circumstances, there will only be one queen in a hive,
They don't. Queen bees don't normally leave the hive, and there is only one in each hive.
In a hive, there can be multiple queen bees present, but usually only one queen bee will dominate and lay eggs.
The queen bee is normally in the hive producing eggs which later turn into bees. She is also yes in the hive but telling the worker bees what to do.
Only one queen to a hive. If two queens are born at the same time, they will fight until one is dead.
The attendants in a group of bees are responsible for caring for the queen bee, feeding developing larvae, cleaning the hive, and regulating temperature and ventilation within the hive. They also assist in grooming and feeding other adult bees.
in the hive
Usually one
it is the queen bees worckers
When the old hive gets to crowded