There are actually more than 8 different types of animals that eats bees. The bee eater birds, crickets, grasshoppers, frogs, and maybe bears eat bees. I wonder how many get stung in the process.
http://answers.ask.com/Science/Other/what_eats_bees
yellowjakets and hornets and frogs eat bees
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_eats_a_bee
copied from a post by Ken Burton: Paper wasps (Yellowjackets and Hornets) are the insects that make these nests. The nest grows quickly during the spring and early summer as the colony grows and several generations of workers are produced. ...
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_eats_bee's
I live in a suburban area that does not have any bears to the best of my knowledge. Two years in a row now, my wife and I have watched wasps make a large, beautiful nest (easily as big as a basketball), and in late September/early October...
http://www.enature.com/expert/expert_show_question.asp?...
Other predators break into nests and incude badgers, who will eat the entire brood, wax, stored food and any adult bees that do not escape. ... Predation occurs when one animal eats other animals and kills them. The animal that is killed is called the prey and the animal that does the killing is called the predator.
www.bumblebee.org/PREDATORS.htm www.bumblebee.org/PREDATORS.htm
Facts, information, quizzes and trivia on No animal eats bees and False. ... Home Factopedia Brainoffs Rankings Goodies Community ... Skunks eat bees! Misc > True or False;
www.factacular.com/facts/No_animal_eats_bees www.factacular.com/facts/No_animal_eats_bees
the bees.And rrrr!And he did!The end! ... This short story brought to you by Lillian - I did not edit and will most likely not edit her posts. She wrote this one over the weekend. I was busy with who knows what; she brought the story to me and asked me to staple it together along the edges.
pinkelephantbooks.com/2008/05/05/the-bear-eats-bees/ pinkelephantbooks.com/2008/05/05/the-bear-eats-bees/
Although a common species, I was encouraged by Paul Lee to submit this picture owing to the unusual prey. ... Paul explained that bumblebees are generally considered too large to be a common food item for most spiders but this one had clearly not read the books! ... DMap - distribution mapping software; All distribution maps...
www.boxvalley.co.uk/nature/sns/wad62/w62-11.html
The full collection of original colour British Bird prints from 1891 ... Status and distribution Fairly common summer visitor to the south & east of the Region. Breeds over much of Iberia (except northcoast), in southern France and parts of Italy, and from the eastern Adriatic to the In Russia breeds north to about 57°N.
www.birdcheck.co.uk/main/previewpages/previewpage17.htm
Eats wasps, bees, termites, butterflies, moths, caterpillars of codling moth, cankerworms, cutworms, grasshoppers, crickets, also spiders, scorpions, ticks, mites, mollusks, turtles, snails, eggs and young of small birds, mice, shrews, lizards, frogs.
www.snowcrest.net/kellyj/wildbirdcare/group4.html
Definitions