Answer is the cell in a wax honeycomb:
The one queen bee of a colony lays thousands of eggs - each into one cell in a wax honeycomb produced by worker bees. Larvae hetch from those eggs and are being fed. This is the "baby" form of a bee. The bee hetches after several moltings. The feeding decides if it becomes a succeeding queen (with royal jelly) or one of the many workers (first royal jelly, later honey and pollen).
Honey bees are born in their hive and feral bees in their nest.
Forager bees collect nectar and pollen, and bring them back to the hive where they are stored. Water is evaporated from the nectar, turning it into honey. Bees eat pollen, a rich source of protein, and honey, which is a carbohydrate.
honey hence the name honey bees Honey bees also produce bees wax by converting honey.
They leave them in a capsule thingy. The queen kills the male babies as they have no use for them. Once the female are out of their capsule they get straight to work; producing Honey!
Honey comes from Bees like Honey Bees.
Do honey bees produce WHAT? If the question is "honey", then yes, HONEY bees produce HONEY. If the question is NOT "honey", I'm afraid I can't help you.
Honey is produced by bees. The bees gather the pollen and nectar of flowers and take it back to the hive, where they basically ingest it and vomit it back up as honey, which they store. They store honey to feed to their larvae (babies) and to feed on during the winter. Lots of different flowers are used by the bees to make honey, it depends what species of bee it is and what area their hive is located in.
No honey bees for the honey.
Honey bees are afraid of smoke
Birds are the main predators of honey bees.
No, honey bees are not the only bees that make honey. The bees in question (Apis spp) just happen to be the most famous of the world's natural honey-makers. Other apian examples include bumble and stingless bees.
It is the worker bees that make the honey.