Honey bees benefit the farmer through pollination of many fruit, nut and vegetable crops.
Honey farmers are typically referred to as beekeepers or apiarists. They are responsible for managing honeybee colonies to produce honey and other bee products.
Honey farmers or Apiarists .
Honey farmers or Apiarists .
In addition to beekeeping as a source of revenue through honey sales, beekeeping has the added benefit -- and sometimes primary purpose for some farmers -- of improving crop pollination in the vicinity of the beehives. http://honeybeesguide.com/beginning-beekeeping.html
Farmers markets
Normally Beekeeper, but sometimes honey farmers or apiarists.
Honey guides are birds that have a symbiotic relationship with humans known as mutualism. They help humans find beehives in exchange for leftover honey and bee larvae that humans cannot access. Humans benefit from the honey guides' guidance, while the honey guides benefit from access to the beeswax combs.
Farmers don't usually breed honey bees, but they do need them for pollination purposes depending on the type of farm. For example, a livestock farmer doesn't need bees but a fruit farmer definitely does need bees.
honeybees are wonderful benefactors to crop farmers because they pollinate their crops. they also can give farmers a little bit of extra money because when they go back to their hives with some of the pollen, they will make the farmers honey.
Honeybees come in handy as assistants in fertilizing crops
Honey bees pollinate plants. If you were a fruit farmer, you might have to depend on honey bees brought to you by a bee farmer to pollinate your crop. There aren't enough bees or other insects in a given area to pollinate all of a fruit farmers crop without importing honey bees from another area.
There isn't another type of honey.