Bees buzz. The onomatopoeia is bzz.
There is no atmosphere or flowers on the moon so no bees can niether fly nor polinate
They fly so that they can reach flowers to obtain the nectar which they feed on.
I guess yes, most do fly towards all flowers except for the bees who's name escapes right now, who do not fly at all.
Bees cannot fly in the snow, because they hibernate when the temperature is low enough for snow to form. Whether they could navigate the obstacle of the snow flakes, we don't really know, because the situation does not arise. Also note that there is no reason for bees to fly when it is snowing, because they fly primarily to get to flowers, so they can collect nectar and pollen, and there are no flowers in bloom when it is snowing.
When bees land on flowers, their fuzzy legs pick up pollen. When they do, they fly to other flowers. While they're sucking up nectar, their legs rub off pollen. That pollen helps the flowers grow.
Bees and almost all winged insects have four wings. Sometimes the first wing has evolved into a hard protective shell, as in the beetles. Bees can fly for miles looking for flowers, but always find their way back to their hive. They do a "dance" to communicate to other bees and show them how to fly in order to find the right flowers.
Bees can fly up to 55,000 meters in a two week period. If the ocean is on low tide, they generally do fly over. Eventually dying several miles at sea.
Yes, bees make a buzzing sound when they fly. The sound is produced by the rapid movement of their wings as they flap.
because flowers have pollon in them so then the bees come a long and take the pollon then they fly, when they fly the pollon falls off and pollon helps to grow things. If we dont have bees to pollinate things then the world would die out in four years.
Honey bees are more active in warm weather and hardly ever fly if the temperature is less than 10 degrees Celsius.
Flowers are generally colorful and fragrant to attract bees and other insects. Since flowers must remain stationary, they depend on other means for reproduction. Bees, for example, are attracted to bright, fragrant flowers because they use their nectar to make honey. The flowers, however, need the bees for fertilization and reproduction. When a bee lands on a flower, pollen gets stuck to their legs. As the bees then fly from flower to flower, they deposit the previous flower's pollen, unknowingly fertilizing new flowers and allowing them to reproduce. By attracting more bees (by enhancing their colors and fragrance), the flowers are increasing their own survival.
Bees fly from flower to flower collecting pollen. When the bees visit a new flower, some of the pollen from previous flowers fall off into the new flower. This pollinates (fertilises) the flower. No fertilisation = no reproduction. It's the same with most living things - fauna or flora.