I think its chartruse
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.
Yellow, sue to the flower having more pollen.
What is Barry Gibb from the bee gees favourite colour
A bee's colour vision extends well into the ultra-violet part of the spectrum, but not so far as ours into the red end of the spectrum. Bees can also distinguish plane polarized light, which we can't.
A bee's colour vision is not the same as ours. We see colours from red to blue violet, but a bee sees colours ranging from orange-yellow to ultra violet, so are blind to red. However, a red flower may not appear black to them because it may reflect ultra violet, which we can't see. Most flowers have patterns visible in ultra violet which help guide the bees to the nectar.
no.Obviously didn't you see flower before,some have only 1 colour petal
It's not so much they don't like it: they can't see it. A bee's color vision is not the same as ours. Their eyes are sensitive well into the ultra-violet part of the spectrum, but not as far as ours towards the red end of the spectrum. To a bee, deep red appears black.
It is difficult to give a categorical answer to this because a bee's colour vision is different from ours. We see colours in the range from red to blue violet, but bees see orange yellow to ultra violet. Therefore bees can't see red. However, a red flower may not appear black to them because it may reflect ultra violet light which they can see.
You have to wait until the plant grows into a flower to see what color it is. Cheating is not allowed on Moshi Monsters.
A honey bee's colour vision extends well into the ultra violet range of the spectrum so thay can see ultra violet light.
Bees might not be able to see red so to them it may appear the same as black, but they can see ultra-violet light, which is invisible to us, and so can see patterns in the petals that we can't.
Females, males are only meant to mate with the queen.