Yes, bees eats pollen.
Specifically, the insect in question (Apis spp) collects pollen, nectar and water. The water may be added to dilute honey fed to larvae in the home hive. The nectar and pollen may be mixed to form extra protein-rich bee bread.
to make honey bees are collect pollen
they r important because they give pollen to flowers for bees to make honey
No. That is in their DNA
No. Bees make honey from nectar. Although the honey may contain a small amount of pollen from the flowers from which the nectar was collected, this is accidental.Bees do collect pollen and bring it back to the hive, but this is used as food, particularly for the developing larvae.
Bees eat nectar and pollen that they collect off of the flowers. Honey bees will even eat the honey that they make from the pollen that they collect.
No, they use nectar.
Bees take pollen to make honey.
If you might have noticed a recent answer, which was pollen, that answer is wrong. Bees collect nectar, which they turn into honey. pollen sticks to their legs and falls onto other flowers. this is called pollination.
Pollen because they use it to make honey.
no because honey bees pollen
they collect pollen from flowers and take it to there hive to make honey
Bumblebees eat nectar and pollen made by flowers. The sugary nectar provides the bees with energy while the pollen provides them with protein, according to The Bumblebee Conservation Trust. They make honey by chewing the pollen and mixing it with their saliva, according to Animal Diversity Web (ADW).