bee's mostly drink and tectaly eat pollen
pollen and necter
Quavers aren't normally on their diet.
Wild turkeys primarily feed on a diet of seeds, nuts, fruits, and insects, but they may occasionally consume bees if they come across them. However, bees are not a significant part of their diet. Turkeys are more likely to eat other insects and invertebrates that are easier to catch and consume. Overall, while they can eat bees, it is not a common occurrence.
Bumble bees live on pretty much the same diet as honey bees: pollen and nectar (the basis of honey).
Blue banded bees do not eat lantana flowers. The majority of their diet comes from the nectar of blue flowers.
No - they're vegetarians. The rabbit's diet consists of flowers, grasses, plants etc. The bee's diet is nectar and pollen.
Carpenter bees are quite large and may even be mistaken for bumblebees. The carpenters tend to have a diet consisting of pollen and nectar.
Yes, honeybees have a diet. The insects in question (Apis spp) prioritize certain food sources -- through the combination of digestive juices, nectar, or pollen -- at certain stages in their life cycles and natural histories. For example, larvae will devour brood food (or royal jelly if they will become queen bees), mature bees will eat beebread or honey, and queen bees will feed upon royal jelly.
Bees collect pollen to feed their young larvae and for their own nutrition. Pollen is a rich source of proteins, vitamins, and minerals that are essential for the growth and development of bee colonies.
Dragonflies do not typically prey on honey bees. Dragonflies mostly feed on small insects like flies, mosquitoes, and gnats that they catch while flying. Honey bees are not a common part of their diet.
yes, they eat flies, bees, mosquitoes, butterflies, mostly small insects, and some plants
because vegan's do not eat produce that comes from an animal and honey is made by bees.