Bees don't make hives. A hive is an artificial home provided by a beekeeper to keep his/her bees in.
No, honey bees typically make hives above ground in structures like trees, caves, or man-made beehives. Ground-dwelling bees like mining bees or sweat bees may create nests underground, but honey bees do not.
They make honeycombs that's where you get honey from.
It is used for making hives,bees not only make honey they also make beewax for hives
Nature. Bees are insects. Birds make nests.
yes
Obviously bees don't make the hives - humans do that. The hives we see today were designed to make it easier to keep bees and harvest honey. Before the current type of hive, it was necessary for the beekeeper to destroy the nest each autumn in order to take the honey.
Australia, in all states except Tasmania. They make nests in mud and clay and will die in a cold climate. You will see blue-banded bees on the victims list for the 2009 "Murder Under the Microscope" online ecological challenge.
They first find bees to help them and then they find a queen bee the queen lays the eggs to make the hives while some bees make the hive and some comfort the queen bee.
It's not the hives that are hexagonal, it's the wax cells that the bees construct within the hive and the shape makes for greater strength and efficient use of space.
None other than bees.
The bees, which are found in the hives. For wax needed for a quest, on bird isle there is a lady who make it.