Honey Bee's love warm and dry climates but they will occasionally live in subtropical conditions (rainy period/humid periods). Bee's are cold blooded insects and you will not them in arctic or subarctic climates.
Bumble bees live for about 2 to 6 weeks, although queen bumble bees can live for several months. The duration of their lifespan depends on factors such as the time of year and their role within the colony.
It depends on how many stripes it has
Bumble bees live in pre-existing cavities such as abandoned rodent burrows, old bird nests, or hollow spaces in trees. They do not build hives like honey bees, but rather create small colonies inside these cavities where the queen lays her eggs and the workers store nectar and pollen.
Bumble bees have a short lifespan due to their intense and demanding work schedule. They typically work themselves to exhaustion collecting nectar and pollen, which takes a toll on their bodies. Additionally, their short lifespan is also influenced by natural factors such as predators, diseases, and environmental conditions.
There are no known bees that live in dirt. Bees typically nest in hives, trees, or underground burrows, but not directly in dirt. Burrowing bees, like digger bees, may create nests in the ground near vegetation, but they do not live inside the dirt itself.
Most bumble bees live in suitable holes, such as abandoned mouse holes in the ground or in soil banks.
Honey bees live in a hive, bumble bees live in a nest.
Bumble bees live for about 2 to 6 weeks, although queen bumble bees can live for several months. The duration of their lifespan depends on factors such as the time of year and their role within the colony.
Bumble bees live on pretty much the same diet as honey bees: pollen and nectar (the basis of honey).
10 to 20 days
Yes, but in much smaller colonies with around 50 others.
It depends on how many stripes it has
Yes, bumblebees live in some deserts.
We can't keep bumble bees in the same way we keep honey bees. There are several reasons for this:Bumble bees tend to be either solitary or live in very small colonies, compared to the honey bee hive of around 60,000 bees in the summer.Honey bees make more honey than they need, and this is what we collect. Bumble bees do make honey, but only in very small amounts. At the most you would collect about a tablespoonful of honey from a bumble bee nest.Bumble bees won't live in hives.A honey bee colony lives through the winter (they don't hibernate), so you still have the colony in spring. At the end of summer newly-mated bumble bee queens fly off to find somewhere to hibernate through the winter; all other bumble bees die as the cold weather comes.WRONG. The person who gave this answer has no idea what they are talking about. Bumble bees are commonly kept as pollinators, especially for indoor greenhouse crops like tomatoes. Google it.
Bumble bees live in pre-existing cavities such as abandoned rodent burrows, old bird nests, or hollow spaces in trees. They do not build hives like honey bees, but rather create small colonies inside these cavities where the queen lays her eggs and the workers store nectar and pollen.
from my research the world famous "bumble bees" live in California. other type of bee is, a "solitary bee" I'm sure there are others but the majority is "bumble bees", and "solitary".
All bees, including bumble bees, have a one-year life span. The Queen does hibernate until Spring.