Yes they do see in ultraviolet color. I just saw it for the question "How do Honeybees see?" answer.:)
Very much so, in fact more than you can.
A bee can see ultra-violet light which we can't, but is not quite as sensitive to deep red light as we are.
Bees can also distinguish plane polarized light, which we can't.
No.
For bees the vision is black and gray.
Yaa but it cn see yellow color.
Bees can see ultraviolet colors which are blues, purples, and greens. Bees can not see the color red at all. As for the color yellow, yes they can see it but have a hard time distinguishing it.
blue, red and green
yes
Yellow and black
yellow and black
Well according to my calcs. Btw I am a zooplankton and I like the color yellow. My ancestors are bees. If you put the two together my ancestors are bees and I like yellow; therefore, bees like yellow.
Yellow jackets (wasps) and bees are two different species. However, they both have very sensitive senses of smell, with the sensors on their antennae.
Black and yellow
What is Barry Gibb from the bee gees favourite colour
yellow
Umm,...yellow? Oh, and a bit of black too.
Yes, they can be another color than yallow. They can be yellow, red, or blue.
The color yellow is not a face's hive for bees
green, brown, yellow, 32
by there color black and yellow, it means danger