Technically yes -In fact, nectar is stored in an organ called the "honey stomach" which is part of the bee's esophagus. But the honey stomach-also known as the honey sac, crop, or ingluvies-is a specialized organ designed to expand and store nectar until it can be ferried back to the hive.
Once the forager bee returns home she regurgitates the contents of the honey stomach and, through the process of trophallaxis, transfers it to a house bee. The house bee will begin to process the nectar
Honey bees also have an organ for digestion called the ventriculus or mid-gut. But the mid-gut occurs after the honey stomach and is separated from it by the proventriculus which is a muscular organ that regulates the opening between these two parts of the alimentary canal. Further down the line are the intestines, rectum, and anus.
Honey is produced from the nectar of flowers comprising of various sugars like laevulose,dextrose with enzymes,acids,pollen grains stored in the honey comb to be used in winter by the bees (Apis mellifera).However it cannot be ruled out that a measure of contamination is found in the honey.
In basic terms the honey bee ingests (eats) the nectar of flowers,the nectar then mixes with enzymes and acids in the bee's digestive system which turn the nectar into honey,the bee then regurgitates (vomits) the honey into the comb which then becomes their food..
No. Insect droppings are not that different from mammal faeces. Honey is regurgitated from the bee and made from nectar and pollen. Its function is to feed bee larvae.
Bees use nectar from flowers to produce honey, the honey badger then feed on the honey that the bees produce.
All honey is made by bees, therefore it is natural. If it is not made by bees then it is not honey.
No. Only honey bees - Apis Mellifera - do that.
Bees eat pollen as well as nectar and honey.
Honey bees do not eat mud. They eat nectar and pollen from flowers, as well as the honey that they make from nectar.
honey hence the name honey bees Honey bees also produce bees wax by converting honey.
Honey comes from Bees like Honey Bees.
Do honey bees produce WHAT? If the question is "honey", then yes, HONEY bees produce HONEY. If the question is NOT "honey", I'm afraid I can't help you.
No, honey bees are not the only bees that make honey. The bees in question (Apis spp) just happen to be the most famous of the world's natural honey-makers. Other apian examples include bumble and stingless bees.
No honey bees for the honey.
Honey bees are afraid of smoke
Birds are the main predators of honey bees.
It is the worker bees that make the honey.
Bees use nectar from flowers to produce honey, the honey badger then feed on the honey that the bees produce.
They are called honey bees because they collect nectar to make honey.
Bumble bees do not have honey pots, the keep their honey in honey combs.
Of course honey bees are real! The honey has to be preduced somehow!