no because honey bees pollen
Bees that collect a flower's honey give to that flower pollen deposits from another flower.
To collect pollen and nectar.
Bees take pollen to make honey.
No, bees don't eat anything on a flower while standing on it, they gather its pollen on their legs and fly back to the hive where the pollen is used to make honey by eating it then vomiting it, the honey (product of the pollen) is fed to the pupas. That is the only eating of flower parts that is done by bees.
Bees want the nectar to make honey. The bees move pollen from flower to flower while they gather the nectar.
The coffee plants flower and the bees collect this pollen and use it to make their honey. Honey made from this pollen has a distinctly different flavor than the clover honey sold at most grocery stores.
The worker bees go out to collect pollen and nectar which they bring back to the Hive for food and to make honey. Honey bees eat honey and pollen as their primary food, but they also gather liquids and juices from plant and fruit exudates. When honey bees come across insects that secrete honeydew, they gather the liquid and store it as honey. When pollen, nectar, or honeydew aren't available, honey bees can collect and store plant spores and dusty animal feed as well.
Bees do not ' know' anything. They just fly from flower to flower gathering pollen and nectar to take back home and feed baby bees. In the process, bees accidentally leave a wee bit of that pollen on other flowers - just enough to pollinate them.
Bees carry the pollen between flowers, which enables the fruit to grow.
Yes, honey bees eat nectar and pollen.
No. Honey is a substance obtained from bees. Bees produce honey from pollen, not nectar.
Form pollen