All bees collect nectar for their own consumption. Only the honey bee collects sufficient to make enough honey for us to harvest.
Yes, bees collect nectar from flowers of the plants
Bees collect nectar from flowers and then produce 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.
No, honey bees are insects that produce honey as a food source. Honey bees collect nectar from flowers and use it to make honey, which they store in their hives as a source of energy. Honey bees are not made out of honey.
No that's aphids, bees are collect pollen and nectar. No, bees collect nectar from nectary glands and pollen from the anthers in their pollen sacks. A lot of pollen also gets stuck to them elsewhere, and this can brush off in other flowers to pollinate them.
Honey is mostly made from nectar, a sugary liquid which bees collect from flowers. Sometimes bees will collect a substance called honeydew, which is sugar-rich sticky substance, secreted by aphids and some scale insects as they feed on plant sap.
To collect nectar and pollen.
To collect pollen and nectar.
To feed themselves and their young.
The sweet fluid produced by plants and collected by bees is known as nectar.
No, bees do not collect nectar from the roots of plants. They primarily gather nectar from the flowers, which is produced in the floral structures. Roots do not produce nectar; instead, they absorb water and nutrients from the soil for the plant's growth. Bees are attracted to flowers for their nectar and pollen, which are crucial for their foraging and reproduction activities.
The flowers carry nectar, so when the bees collect the nectar they eat it. That helps produce the honey. The nectar in the flowers is the bees food source. Without flowers, the bees would all die out.