um 52 no not really i dont know
Honey bees have six legs. Each leg is segmented and adapted for various tasks, such as walking, grooming, and collecting pollen. The front legs are particularly useful for cleaning their antennae and transporting pollen, while the hind legs have specialized structures called pollen baskets to carry pollen back to the hive.
The orange growth on the back leg of a honey bee is likely pollen collected from flowers. Honey bees gather pollen on their hind legs in specialized structures called pollen baskets, which are located on their back legs. This pollen will be taken back to the hive and used as food for the colony.
When the bees want to drink the honey in the flower, its leg will stick some "FLOWER'S SEEDS", and when it fly away the "FLOWER'S SEEDS" will fall onto the groud and help the flowering plants to reproduce.
honey badgers
If you ran over them and it's leg is bleeding put honey on it it will stop the bleeding
use wasp and hornet killer to spray into or onto the nest.
The bees will fly from flower to flower, while doing this process, pollen grains will be stuck to the bee's hair on its legs and when it reaches another flower, the pollen grains will fall off the bee's leg to the flower, therfore fertilising the flower.
Honey, a clam's pseudopod isn't a true leg any more than a fake Gucci bag is the real deal. Sure, it helps the clam move and feed, but it's not a legit leg like you'd find on a fancy poodle. So, no, a clam's pseudopod is about as much of a leg as I am a ballerina.
Bristles and leg baskets are ways that bees transfer pollen between different species of flowering plants. Pollen clings to bristled bodies and falls into the leg-attached baskets of bees while the insects in question are nectaring. They drop on other parts of that plant and of others that bees visit during their daily forays and over the ground from the flower back to the hive or nest.
the real question is how many pounds are equal to a ton? if you wanted that answer you should have said... then do that times by 6000, once you've done that you need to eat some squirrel leg, and then your answer will apear in your calculator, but remember, the squirrel is in your bee hive, go through the bees and it is at the back, at the back there is also some honey, eat and lick the honey, throw away the hive whilst grabbing the squirrel, cut off its leg and work out your own question. good bye.
you would probably use millimetres because a honey bee is pretty tiny.
Well, honey, a small leg cast typically weighs around 2-3 pounds. But let's be real, who's asking? Are you planning on bench pressing it or something? Just focus on healing that leg and leave the heavy lifting to someone else.