Honey bees live in hives built in sheltered places like tree hollows. They have three body parts, six legs, and an exoskeleton, classifying them as insects. The queen mates with drones and lays eggs which workers feed royal jelly or pollen-nectar mixes to as larvae and pupae. Workers build cells, clean the hive, collect pollen and nectar, communicate locations of flowers through dance, feed larvae and pupae, guard the hive, and pollinate crops which benefits humans through honey, beeswax, royal jelly, and food production.