Technically Bees don't 'eat' flowers, but will however go to most types of flowering plants in order to collect pollen/nectar.
a bumbleater
Yes, it's possible to eat bumblebees [Bombusspp] ... particularly if you're a skunk [Mephitidaefamily]. A skunk in your back yard may be digging up ground-nesting bumblebees or soil-dwelling grubs. Either way, they eat them. With the bumblebees, they get dessert in the sense that they like the honey too.
Yes they do.
Yes, Bumblebees eat nectar which is plant produce
Yes, hornets are known to prey on bumblebees. They can capture and kill bumblebees to feed on their bodies or even bring them back to their nests to feed their young. This behavior is more common in certain hornet species, such as the Asian giant hornet.
Lady bugs do not have a specific flower it likes. The lady bug gets on any flower or plant with leave of course that is near their main food, aphids.
grass any flower
people eat bumblebees and bumble bees r canables eh
Bumblebees eat nector found in flowers and other flowering plants.
the flower mantis baby will eat fruit fly's and house fly's adults will eat any thing from crickets to moths.
No. Mountain Laurel is quite toxic and you should not eat any part of the shrub.
Most bumblebees hate water.