Bee urticaria has been supplying honey and beeswax to humans for a long time. Though many species are still wild, this commercial use has produced a big beekeeping business.
All bees are social and cooperative insects. Residents of hives are usually divided into three types.
Almost everyone has ever seen workers only. These bees are women without sexual development. Workers feed on bait (honey in pollen and pollen), strike their feathers, clean up the air, spread the air, and fulfill many other social functions.
Queen's work is easy - laying eggs will produce the next generation of bees in the nest box. There are usually only one queen in a hive. When the Queen dies, the worker gives women larvae food called "royal jelly" to make a new queen. This elixir grows workers into a fertile queen. The Queen also coordinates the activity of the nest box by producing chemicals that direct the behavior of other bees.
Drone is called a drone - the third type of bee. In spring and summer there are hundreds of drones in each hive box, but when the nest box enters a wasteful survival mode, it is kicked out in the winter.
Bees are preserved in honey and pollen throughout the winter and gather to keep them warm. In this season, larvae are supplied from stores, and in the spring, nest boxes are clustered with a new generation of bees.
Bees may be insects, but when they are tame they are like animals. European bees were first brought to North America by pioneers of the continent of Africa in the early 17th century. Native Americans have existed for centuries without bees and have relied on other pollinators to raise crops. Today, bees can even be regarded as invasive species in certain places. All concerns about bees ignore other important pollinators such as bumblebee. Many of them experience severe death, 96% of which are high. At least one North American species is estimated to be threatened with extinction and another rustproof bumblebee, Bombus affinis, has been added to the list of endangered species of the US Fish and Wildlife Service. It is the first bee to be protected on the continent of the United States, but IUCN lists some endangered bees and there may be more bees more required in the near future.
Over the past few years, we all watched a couple of questions: "Are bees extinct?" Now, to say to you that "Bee 's extinction" is more complicated than this I am here. First of all, no - bees will not be extinct. In fact, the number of bee populations is on the rise. Now this is partly because they are domesticated cattle and the beekeepers only respond to higher bee mortality by increasing breeding. But they do not risk to die soon. However, many bees (and other beneficial insects) are in danger. why? Loss of habitat, climate change, pollution, spread is due to spread. Cardboard and other viruses can be included in the list. There is also the possibility that pesticide functions (although it is difficult to implement because it is not fully understood).