Yes, and no, it depends on the pitch from your lawnmowers engine because the sound can simulate a bear roaring, which is the bees most dangerous foe. It's all sound waves.
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Yes, for two reasons. Firstly, they don't like the vibration that the mower causes and will often come out to investigate; and secondly they don't like the smell of the exhaust fumes from the mower engine.<br>Bees will often mob a petrol mower close to the hive, and even an electric mower can attract their attention.
No. The beekeeper moves the bees to another part of the hive before he/she removes the honey.
A hive is an artificial home provided for honey bees by a beekeeper. Once bees are settled in the hive (or wild colony), they usually stay there and don't move.
Most plants require insects to transfer pollen from one flower to another, and most of this pollination is done by bees. Without pollination, plants would not produce seeds or fruit, so bees are not just useful, they are essential for life as we know it.
Cluster to keep the queen warm and manage food supplies inside the hive and die or forage outside the hive are the things that happen to honey bees in winter. The course of the winter depends upon the population levels in the hive and the temperature levels. A cold winter results in bees inside the hive if conditions are not crowded (with ejections if they are) whereas a warm winter yields occasional forages back and forth, indoors and outdoors.
They store honey to use as food when the weather is too poor for them to leave the hive to forage for nectar.
bees are usually distracted in making honey by human activity, the beekeepers disturb the bees for a good cause to extract the honey from the hive and sell the honey to the store. when a beekeeper comes to take the honey most of the bees go to the beekeeper to sting him, thats why he wears the suit. :D
a honey bees hive contains nuclear waste from the bees mateing and poisoned Honey which paralyze some people
Unharvested honey remains in the hive. The honey that is not harvested is consumed by the bees in the hive to remain alive. A talented beekeeper knows how much honey he can remove from the hive and not harm the bees.
dump out honey from hive
Honey is not made by humans. Bees secrete it in their hive. Humans harvest it by smoking the bees to subdue them and then removing some of the honey comb from the hive.
In English, the home of honey bees is called the hive.
They don't usually. The bees make honey in the hive.
The hive bodies.
Honey bees are born in their hive and feral bees in their nest.
A hive
The bees home is made of wax and honey. It is found in trees. Bees nourish youth in the hive. Honey is also made in the hive.
honey bees live in hive on the tree