Flowers.
They eat nectar plants, such as butterfly bushes, and flowers that bees suck nectar out of.
They eat nectar plants, such as butterfly bushes, and flowers that bees suck nectar out of.
Yes, bees collect nectar from flowers of the plants
No, bees use their mouth, or proboscis, to suck up the nectar.
No, humans are not able to suck nectar out of a petunia flower. Nectar is typically extracted by insects like bees and hummingbirds that have specialized mouthparts for accessing the nectar in the flower.
Aphids' Also bees "suck" the nectar from flowers to produce honey.
Nectar.
The sweet fluid produced by plants and collected by bees is known as nectar.
Bees do have mouths. The bees mouth consists of mandibles and a proboscis. They use the mouth parts to chew up food and also to suck up nectar.
bees have nectar and go to the plants and they put the nectar on the plant then the plant grows and it becomes pollinated in which later the bees come and take its honey
Bees do not suck nectar through a straw like humans. Instead, they use their long proboscis (tongue) to lap up nectar from flowers. This proboscis acts like a drinking straw to collect nectar, which is then stored in their honey stomach.
The bees will fly from flower to flower, while doing this process, pollen grains will be stuck to the bee's hair on its legs and when it reaches another flower, the pollen grains will fall off the bee's leg to the flower, therfore fertilising the flower.