First, they don't make whats exactly called honey. What they have is nectar stores for food, which are needed for a short period of time, and in comparison with honey bees, bumblebees store only a tiny amount of honey.
Bumblebee honey is edible, although it is thinner and watery than Honeybee honey
The common bumblebee is usually larger than the honey bee worker, and of comparable size to the honey bee drone.
Yes, to produce honey - there is no other source of honey.
Approximately 1/12 teaspoon
There is only honey. The taste will vary according to the plants that the bee has been foraging on. After the beekeeper has extracted the honey, he may choose to produce runny honey, set honey, comb honey etc., but that is done by the beekeeper, not the bees.
A hive usually refers to a large honey bee colony which has nursery chambers as well as honeycombs to store the honey they produce. A wasp, yellow jacket, bumblebee nest is simply where they live and raise young since they do not produce honey.
no
Bumblebee honey is edible, although it is thinner and watery than Honeybee honey
During the spring months, the queen bumblebee builds a wax honey pot to use for food storage. The queen provisions the wax honey-pot with nectar and pollen.
hontooth
The common bumblebee is usually larger than the honey bee worker, and of comparable size to the honey bee drone.
A bumblebee is not considered to be an autotroph. Autotrophs are plants that make their own food. Bees eat the nectar flowers produce, not food they produce themselves.
Do honey bees produce WHAT? If the question is "honey", then yes, HONEY bees produce HONEY. If the question is NOT "honey", I'm afraid I can't help you.
In its lifetime, the average honey bee worker produces about 1/12th of a teaspoon of honey.
In its lifetime, the average honey bee worker produces about 1/12th of a teaspoon of honey.
answer 1 king kong + bumblebee = king kong answer 2 bumblebee + king kong = bumblebee
Yes, Bumblebees eat nectar which is plant produce