Harvesting beeswax does not hurt the bees. The bees will just continue on with their work and create more beeswax.
Bees make beeswax and use it to form chambers where they store honey. There are no actual bee parts or honey in beeswax.
you grow bees on them
You can't. Only bees can make beeswax.
Bees secrete beeswax to build honeycombs. Beeswax is a natural lipid produced by glands on the bee's abdomen.
Some products you get from honey bees include Honey and Beeswax.
Bees build their honeycomb using beeswax, which is a natural substance secreted from glands on the bees' abdomen. The beeswax is chewed and molded by the bees to create the hexagonal honeycomb structure used for storing honey, pollen, and developing brood.
they help them by getting hurt by diffrent animals
Bees create beeswax, a type of lipid, to build honeycombs. Beeswax is produced from special glands on the bees' abdomen and is used as a protective coating for the honeycomb cells.
Yes. Candles have been made from beeswax for many hundreds of years.
Beeswax can vary in color depending on the type of flowers the bees visited to collect nectar. Dark brown beeswax may result from bees collecting nectar from flowers with dark pigments, such as buckwheat or clover. The color can also be influenced by how the beeswax is processed and filtered.
none of your beesnees or beeswax.
No, beeswax is extruded from wax glands on the underside of the abdomen of worker bees as thin plates of wax. These are manipulated by the bees' manidbles to shape them and put them where the bee wants them.