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yes, honey is produced by a living organism called honey bee which belongs to the genus apis. the important bees which are seen in india are rockbee(apis dorsata),indian honey bee(apis indica) and apis mellifera.
Apis mellifera mellifera -- Western/European honey beeApis mellifera cerana -- Oriental honey beeApis mellifera ligustica -- Italian honey beeApis mellifera iberiensis -- Spanish honey beeApis mellifera scutellata -- African honey bee
No. Only honey bees - Apis Mellifera - do that.
Research has shown that the highest production figures come from a bee that is a cross between the European honey bee (apis mellifera mellifera) and the African honey bee (apis mellifera scutella). However that cross produces what has become known as the 'killer' bee, because they are less docile and more likely to sting. On balance, this disadvantage outweighs any production advantage so beekeepers tend to use the pure European honey bee.
Apiculture is what the rearing of honey bees [Apisspp] on a large scale is called.
Apis is Latin Mellifera is Greek
The scientific name of honeybees is Apis mellifera.
Apis mellifera lamarckii was created in 1906.
Apis mellifera macedonica was created in 1988.
Apis mellifera iberiensis was created in 1999.
No. Honey is only produced by the honey bee - Apis Mellifera.
by using apis of paper
The honey bee is Apis mellifera.
The scientific name of the European honey bee is Apis mellifera.
Apis Mellifera and Apis Cerranae
Africanized bees do not have their own genus name because they are, by definition, hybrids. They are the result of crossing Tanzanian bees, apis mellifera scutella, with various European bees, such as apis mellifera lingustica, apis mellifera iberiensis and apis mellifera mellifera.
The scientific name for Carniolan honey bees is Apis mellifera carnica.