Honey bees will stay in the hives when it is too cold to fly out, and will cluster together on the combs to conserve body heat -- rather like penguins in the antarctic.
For bumble bees and wasps: at the end of summer the colonies would have produced new queens and drones. The new queens will mate then fly off to find somewhere sheltered to spend the winter in hibernation. The rest of the colony die. Next spring the queens come out of hibernation and start new nests.
in the winter
no they go to go to a warmer climate
Sparrows are resident in UK all year - they don't migrate.
they get food during spring and summer and store it for winter.
In the winter, they have to do it in the hive because it is too cold to go outside. They then clean everything up when the weather gets warmer. In the summer they do it outside.
Yes.
No they don't. THEY DIE
The honey that bees produce is to feed themselves during the winter. If a beekeeper removes all of their honey, the bees would die of starvation during the winter as they have no way of replenishing their lost stores (no flowers in the winter). The bees are usually fed sugar syrup - a mixture of ordinary granulated sugar mixed with water.
Bee hives do not freeze in the winter. Bees slow down and cluster to regulate temperatures inside the hive and survive.
Bees are semi-dormant in winter and are less likely to attack.
Yes
possibly but i think they hibernate in winter