Yes, they do.
Daisies benefit the ecosystem by providing nectar and pollen for pollinators like bees and butterflies. They also help improve soil health by preventing erosion and providing habitat for beneficial insects. Additionally, daisies contribute to biodiversity and beautify the landscape.
Bees, butterflies, and other flying insects are known to pollinate daisies. They visit the flowers in search of nectar or pollen, and as they move from flower to flower, they transfer pollen, aiding in fertilization.
Yes, bees pollinate daisies. The flowers in question serve as one-stop shopping points because of convenient clusters of nectar and pollen and of easy landings and take-offs. Their yellow centers will be particularly attractive to bees.
I think that the best way to make blue daisies is to put blue food coloring in water and then place the daisies (with stems) in the water. Let them sit and absorb the water and food coloring. If all goes to plan then you should have blue daisies!
The flower's sweet nectar attracts bees to pollinate it. Bees gather nectar and make it into honey.
Flowers make nectar and as far as I know it can't be made artificially.
by flowers
Whenever they can collect nectar. This depends on the weather; air temperature; availability of nectar-bearing flowers and, indeed, whether those flowers have nectar (they won't, for instance, in a drought).
It doesn't. Bees make honey from nectar. Pollen is used to feed the bee larvae.
Nectar
daisies grow mainly in the spring but they also grow in the summer. Daisies grow mainly in hay fields or open plains. They can ,and do, grow everywhere. Which may make daisies are the ultimate plant in the USA!
Daisies is the plural of daisy.Two example sentences with "daises" are:She likes to pick daises to make a daisy chain.The field was full of daises as far as the eye could see.