Warfare seems like an extreme word for bee and ant control. But to answer your question: Bees and their colonies are easily combated with dust like pesticides. As pollinators, bees will pick up powder pesticides and carry them back to the colony.... read more
Warfare seems like an extreme word for bee and ant control. But to answer your question: Bees and their colonies are easily combated with dust like pesticides. As pollinators, bees will pick up powder pesticides and carry them back to the colony. These dust products will effectively kill off entire colonies. read more
Ants don’t fly with the exception of drones and future ant queens. All worker bees fly around with the exception of a few housemaids for the queen. Bee’s help the environment by pollinating plants. read more
While the bees and wasps constitute some 20,000 species each—both groups belong to the order Hymenoptera, which also contains ants—the insects most likely to be conflated are honeybees (Apis mellifera) and any of several representatives of the wasp genera Vespula (commonly known as yellow jackets). read more