If you mean honeybees then they eat pollen when they are fed in the cell and take nectar to later make and store honey. They eat honey and live off of it in winter. They live in colonies of one queen, thousands of workers (females) and hundreds of drone (males). Although drones can live outside the colony. Some are in hives keep by beekeepers and some are wild (feral) .
Plant something for the bees! They are fast becoming an endangered species. If you like more than potatos never use pesticides, herbicides and look for local honey!
No, a bee eats no solids larger than grains of pollen. They live on pollen, honey and nectar.
Eula Bee Corban has written: 'Eat to live' -- subject(s): American Cookery, Analysis, Food, Nutrition
The Goby (Freshwater) eats small live foods, so, yes, they do eat baby fish. :)
I doubt live ones would be pleasant... But I don't know why you would want to eat a bee! I think they are dangerous to eat.
they eat humans
After hatching from the egg, a bee larva is fed a secretion from a worker bee's hyperpharyngeal gland, called royal jelly. Queen larvae are fed on this for the whole of their larval live, but other larvae are fed this for three days after which they are fed a mixture of pollen with a little honey. This is sometimes called 'bee bread'. Adult bees will eat a little pollen, but mainly live on nectar and honey.
When the honey guide bird finds a bee hive with honey, it makes a certain noise. Then the honey badger follows the sound of the bird until it find it, and the bee hive. The badger then breaks down the bee hive and the badger and the bird eat all the honey :) and live happily ever after ;p
A muddy bee is a ground bee. A muddy bee is bees that live in the ground.
No.
no
they eat humans
Nectar.