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Yes, bees collect nectar from flowers of the plants
Bees don't eat plants, green or otherwise but they do eat the nectar that they collect from plants.
Honey bees collect nectar and pollen from flowers and other plants.
Bees collect the nectar from plants, which they use to create honey to feed on for themselves and for their larvae. In turn, the plants are able to be pollinated also.
A honey bee collects nectar from plants which is turned into honey to feed the colony during the winter when it is too cold to forage,
Yes, bees do collect the nectar from a daffodil. They also transfer pollens from one plant to another to pollinate these plants. Hummingbirds are often responsible for gathering the nectar later in the season.
Bees collect nectar from flowers and other plants and turn it into honey. Pollen is collected from similar sources and mainly used to feed pupae and larvae (unborn bees) as pollen is protein rich.
Bees collect nectar from flowers and then produce honey.
No. It is derived from the nectar which the bees collect from flowers.
Not sure what you mean by the opposite of nectar. Bees collect nectar and pollen from flowers.
The sweet fluid produced by plants and collected by bees is known as nectar.
No that's aphids, bees are collect pollen and nectar. No, bees collect nectar from nectary glands and pollen from the anthers in their pollen sacks. A lot of pollen also gets stuck to them elsewhere, and this can brush off in other flowers to pollinate them.