Females, males are only meant to mate with the queen.
Worker bees are female.
female
Female bees can produce baby bees the males cannot. The female bees are diploid and the male bees are haploid. The antennae of a male bee has thirteen segments, while the antennae of a female has twelve. This is one way in which male and female bees are different. The worker (unfertilized female) honey bee does all the work, both in and out of the hive, whereas the male (drone) bee does no work at all. The bad news is that at the end of the breeding season, the drone is ejected from the hive and dies because he doesn't know how to forage for food.
no they are all male
The male's eyes are so much larger because they need to find a potential queen in flight. Second, males are slightly larger than a female worker bee. Third, look very closely at the segmented portion of the bee's antennae.
Females, males are only meant to mate with the queen.
Male bees use nectar for food. Female bees use pollen for feeding the larvae, and nectar and pollen for own food.
The stamen in the flowers (the little things that poke out of the middle of the petals) have pollen on them and when bees come along they collect that pollen and as they fly along to different plants and flowers it drops the pollen which is what fertilizes the flowers.
Bees and wasps carry the male pollen to the female stigma's as they collect nectar from flower to flower. Also, in bigger animales e.g foxes, the pollen sticks to their fur as they pass the flower, and then when they rub against another flower, they transfer the pollen from their fur onto the stigma.
Pollen is a very important food for bees. They mix pollen with a small amount of nectar to produce a substance called beebread. This protein-rich mixture is then fed to the larvae as they grow.
The bees can transport pollen. Pollen is very male and very sexy.
Worker bees are female.
Male bees are called drones and females are workers.
Wind may blow the pollen from the anther and then the stigma will catch or trap it. Or animals like bees, bats, and butterfly's can take pollen from the anther and transport it to the stigma.
Flowers aid a plant in reproducing. Bees come and get pollen from a flower, and in the prosess take pollen from the male part of a flower and it is then placed on the female part. The pollen then produces a pollen tube and will soon become fruit or seeds.
Only female bees can sting.
First pollen falls from a male cone onto a female cone. In time a sperm cell and an egg cell join together in an ovule on the female cone