No, honey bees and flowers have a mutualistic relationship rather than a parasitic one. Honey bees collect nectar and pollen from flowers for food, while simultaneously aiding in the pollination process, which helps flowers reproduce. This interaction benefits both parties, as bees gain nourishment and flowers enhance their chances of successful reproduction.
Bee + Flower=honey
Bee + Flower=honey
A bee and a flower = Honey!
bee+flower=honey :)
bee+flower=honey :)
honey
It gets Nectar from the flower then turns it into honey.
Hi honey
Well i think the honey came from the bee and the bee collected the pollen from the flower and turned it into honey, but i'm not 100% sure.
If you see a honey bee flying from flower to flower, it will be a worker (infertile female). It will NOT be a male and it will NOT be a queen.
Some mutualism example are a bee and a flower. clownfish and an anemone. Bee and Flower are good mutualism because the Bee pollen the flower to get honey and energy.
a mutalistic relationship is when 2 organisms benefit from each other. for example, a flower and a bee, the bee gets pollen from the flower to use and the bee then helps pollinate other flowers so they can reproduce. think about it this way: Mutualism- :) :) Parasitism- :) :( Commensalism- :) :l