Yellow and Black
Flowers attract bees by their scent and beautiful colours they have.
No, colours don't make bees sting. They sting in response to a perceived threat either to themselves or to their colony.
Because the club colours are black and amber.
They attract bees with their vibrant colours and sweet smell so they will want the nectar and pollen inside
scent and the bright colours of the petals GIMA FONSO 10
Wasps and bees are black and yellow because these colours are considered to be associated with danger, which informs other animals that they may attack if harmed.
Attracting Bees with their Colours.
Bees have the ability to distinguish colors, they have a trichromatic color vision, so bees can see the three primary colours of UV, blue and green (they can't see red though) in the way that humans detect red, blue and green. When bees go off to collect nectar, they are attracted to colours of flowers which act as signals for them about the type of flower colours that provide more or less nectar. They will favour certain colours over others, this means that if they have found yellow flowers to provide more nectar they're more likely to visit yellow flowers. There have been many experiements carried out that prove that bees can see colour and many have trained bees successfully to favour certain colour over others. you should read about the work carried out by Von Frisch early 20th century which prove this, and many that followed after that.
The Bees colours are Black and Yellow in a Striped formation ^_^...
Because flowers mean food (pollen and nectar). Not just bees are interested!
Bees will try to stay on the same type of flowers when foraging for nectar and pollen. This is very much to the flowers' advantage because it ensures correct pollination. Bees can tell the difference between flowers both by smell and sight. Using their antennae, bees have a very sensitive sense of smell: very many times more sensitive than our own. They also have good colour vision, but where we see colours from red to blue/violet, bees see colours from orange/yellow to ultra violet.
Although this may seem over-simple, bees are attracted by scent and by the colours. However, bees don't see the colours as we do. Their colour vision extends well into the ultra-violet part of the spectrum and is less sensitive to red. They can see patterns in the petals that we can't, and these patterns guide them to the nectar. This attraction would also explain why bees will come and investigate you if you are wearing flower-scented perfume.