no actually butterflys do it too. Moths do it. pretty much every insect or bug does, BUT only bees use it to make honey
Yes I guess you could say that. Bees suck up the nectar from flowers and take it back to the hive. There they spit out the nectar into wax cells, this is honey.
how do the actions of the bees help flowers survive
Bees polinate flowers.When studying how bees polinate flowers, a bee stung me.Since bees die after stinging a person, there was one less bee able to pollinate.
No, bees don't make flowers die .Bees use flowers pulp to make honey.
You do not drink 'Bees' but you can drink 'mead' which is made from honey made by the Bees.
Nectar is a fluid produced by flowers and made in to honey by bees. In Greek and Roman mythology the drink of the gods
nector is in the flowers and the bees use nector for their honey so the suck it out of the flowers and take it back to their hives
Its called 'interdependence.' The flowers need the bees to pollinate them to survive, but the bees need the flowers so they can make honey, and the female bees pollinate flowers and keep pollen on there legs to feed there larve.
The flowers carry nectar, so when the bees collect the nectar they eat it. That helps produce the honey. The nectar in the flowers is the bees food source. Without flowers, the bees would all die out.
Bees will visit flowers of any colour.
Bees make honey using nectar from flowers
Flowers contain pollen and bees carry it to other flowers but some flowers can spread their own pollen.
As the bees (and other flying insects) move from flower to flower, they drink the nectar and carry pollen on their bodies from flower to flower. It is this cross-pollination that fertilises each flower and the flower can then produce seed for next season flowers.