eat the bees (it's quite nice on toast)
Bees primarily consume nectar and pollen from flowers, including those of oak trees. While oak trees are not major nectar producers, they do produce catkins in the spring, which can attract bees looking for food. Additionally, some bees may forage on other plants in the vicinity of oak trees to supplement their diet. Overall, oak trees play a supportive role in the broader ecosystem, providing resources for various pollinators.
Yes. Bees pollinate most flowers and trees. One of a bees favorite places is a orchard where fruit trees are everywhere.
we have 550 olive trees in northern CA and no bees.
Fruit trees attract bees when in bloom. Bees are also attracted to the sweetness of the fallen fruit. Apple, peach, pear, and cherry for example. Threr are always millions of honey bees that visit my plum and crabapple trees to collect pollen. (I live in North Carolina.)
they let bees build hives in them
Honey bees.
Apple farmers need bees to pollinate their apple trees. Where bees have been eradicated by pesticides, more bees, or hand pollination, are necessary for the trees to bear fruit.
No, honey bees typically make hives above ground in structures like trees, caves, or man-made beehives. Ground-dwelling bees like mining bees or sweat bees may create nests underground, but honey bees do not.
Kill the bees
bees eating birch bark
Bees will do this for you.
they can