Honey is mostly made from nectar, a sugary liquid which bees collect from flowers.
Sometimes bees will collect a substance called honeydew, which is sugar-rich sticky substance, secreted by aphids and some scale insects as they feed on plant sap.
Bees use nectar from flowers to produce honey, the honey badger then feed on the honey that the bees produce.
The nectar collected form flowers and turned into honey and pollen collected from flowers. They may also eat sugar syrup provided to them by a human.
Honey bees do not eat mud. They eat nectar and pollen from flowers, as well as the honey that they make from nectar.
either pollen or honey
Pollinating flowers and producing honey are the jobs that honey bees do.Specifically, the insects in question (Apis spp) drink the nectar of certain herbaceous and wood plants. In the process, they move pollen around so that flowers can reproduce. They use the nectar to make honey when they return to the hive.
Flowers don't have honey. I think your talking about bees that collect pollen and nectar from flowers and then create honey back at their hives
Bees make honey using nectar from flowers
Depends on what flowers are available, and important point, the flowers do not produce honey, but nectar, which the bees convert into honey.
it helps the flowers because the nector they collect(for the honey) helps keep the flowers alive this is one of the things that honey is good for
* It takes about 31,000 flowers to make one teaspoon of honey. (See related links.) * A teaspoon of honey is not even half a flower if your aiming for two flowers you need at least 16 teaspoons of honey!
No, and neither can bees. Bees collect nectar from flowers and add enzymes to make honey.
Bees collect nectar from flowers and then produce honey.
FLOWERS
flowers
flowers
Flowers provide nectar for bees to get and produce honey.
Honey is not collected - it is made by bees from nectar, which is collected from flowers.