The sweet smell and taste of the nectar attracts bees and other flying insects. When these insects fly to other flowers, they transfer pollen from one flower to another, thereby pollinating the plants.
Plants do not provide nectar for animals, they produce nectar because doing so increases the chance of their own successful reproduction. The nectar is an attractant and bribe for pollinating animals to keep them visiting those types of plants.
Nectar is a sugar-rich liquid produced by plants. It is said that common nectar-consuming pollinators include bees, butterflies and moths, hummingbirds and bats.
i think daises or roses or maybe the ones that bees get the nectar from.... i think that is it..... :]
A honey bee's diet consists of nectar and pollen, or honey which is made from nectar. All of these are from plant sources, so in this sense honeybees could be class as herbivores, but they don't eat any part of the plants themselves.
Bees eat pollen as well as nectar and honey.
It is a Herbivore. It eats pollen and nectar.
Yes, bees collect nectar from flowers of the plants
The sweet fluid produced by plants and collected by bees is known as nectar.
bees have nectar and go to the plants and they put the nectar on the plant then the plant grows and it becomes pollinated in which later the bees come and take its honey
Flowers.
Bees help plants by getting nectar from flowers. By getting nectar, they have pollen stuck to their bodies, and by flying around, they drop the pollen to plants, who uses it to flower and as fertilizer.
Nectar
Bees don't eat plants, green or otherwise but they do eat the nectar that they collect from plants.
Eucalypts are excellent nectar plants for bees. Salvation Jane , clover, and lucerne are also good.
nectar
Honey bees collect nectar and pollen from flowers and other plants.
They eat nectar plants, such as butterfly bushes, and flowers that bees suck nectar out of.
They eat nectar plants, such as butterfly bushes, and flowers that bees suck nectar out of.