The Lantana is visited by bees, and butterflies and is even planted to be used as a "honey plant" or for "butterfly gardening". Some species of birds will eat the bloom of the Lantana. The Blue banded Bee usually collects most of it's nectar from blue blooming flowers, they don't "eat" flowers, including the Lantana.For more details, please see the sites listed below.
stop cheating from murder under the microscope haha you stink
You would get brown
If you went without air for a few minutes you would probably turn a dark red. Then you would turn a blue. After that you would turn purple. If you could hold you breath that long and not pass out before you hit the blue mark.
Since green is a secondary color, mixing it with any color would make a tertiary color. But red and green are complimentary colors and therefore would make a brown-black color. So blue, green and red mixed together would make and ugly brown color that's tinted with blue.
If the litmus paper never turned blue we would be dealing with an acid, and we would be unable to proceed to the next step of the procedure.
The answer is...RED!!!!Strong Alkali is DARK BLUE!!!
Blue banded bees do not eat lantana flowers. The majority of their diet comes from the nectar of blue flowers.
lantana has No affect on these bees!
yes
the bluebanded bee only dies because it gets stuck inside the Lantana's petals...... Blue Banded Bee also dies because Lantana is a weed and it's posinous!
nectar Like honey bees, the blue banded bee eats nectar from flowers.
Lantanas aren't harmful at all to Blue Banded Bees. Blue Banded Bees build nests on the stems of Lantanas. And they do not"suck nectar" from them. they ONLY build nests on them. I'm sure you're doing MuM09. the person that answered this before probally does it as well. I do it too. That person probally just wants you to get it wrong. Hope this helped!
Blue Banded Bees are disappearing because of Pesticides and Lantana. Blue Banded Bees also die in winter because it is to cold for them. Blue Banded Bees are born in spring and then die three months later when they are adults in winter.
Like this: http://www.brisbaneinsects.com/brisbane_wasps/BlueBandedBees.htm
the blue banded bee is yellow blue and black
The main way to save the blue banded bee is to avoid the introduction of European bees, which would take over the blue-banded bees' habitat and food sources. Currently, however, it is not facing endangerment.
no because the blue banded bee loves blue flowers and does not affect the blue banded bee. so yeah
Blue-banded Pitta was created in 1871.