they mostly collect pollen and nectar in the day
Foraging for nectar, resin and pollen.
yes yes they do they cover their fairie wings with pollen and sprinkle the land with fairie dust and pollen to produce the beautiful plants and flowers you see each day
Yes they do, they suck it up through a little straw on the front of their body.
Bees build hexagonal cells made of wax which they use to raise young bees and store honey and pollen. The queen honey bee can lay over 1000 eggs per day at the height of the season so the colony is capable of expanding very quickly.
stay away from them is #1Honey bees are a species of bees. The queen gets fed and only the queen lays eggs.The drones only mate with the queen. The queen mates with 8 drones and lays more than 1000 eggs per day. And honey bee's eat pollen.
Yes, bees pollinate blue bonnets.Specifically, blue bonnets (Lupinusspp) attract a number of bee species. The color of the spot on a blue bonnet's flower informs the bee as to the number of days passed since the flower's opening. The spot is white through day 5, pink on day 6, and purple on day 7. Bees prefer to pollinate in the first five days, during which the pollen is at its stickiest.
Link goes to lyrics for Nice Day by Persephone's Bees.
because the honey bees are using all their energy throughout the day
A Hummingbird drinks nectar, not pollen. As for how much nectar one drinks per day, I believe it is equal to (or more than) the Hummingbird's body weight.
When it is pollen which is spring it is very fun on that day. My mom told me to pollinate the plants!
Insect pollination requirements, short and specific open-and-shut times, staggered female and male floral openings, and stickily thick pollen are the special features of pumpkin flowers that welcome use of non-native pollinating bees over native insects. Pumpkin fruits set only through insect pollination even though one plant contains both female and male flowers. Bumblebees, whose buzz vibration moves pollen grains from where they need to be, and squash bees have hairy, large bodies to which pollen easily sticks, and start their day early, in sync with the dawn open and pre-noon close of pumpkin flowers.