To reduce the number of stings they receive.
Beekeepers collect honey by carefully extracting the honeycombs from the beehives, removing beeswax caps, and then spinning the combs in a centrifuge to separate honey from beeswax. The honey is then filtered and stored for consumption.
Provided they are honey bees, most beekeepers would be pleased to do so.
yes, bees collect pollen, eats the pollen, and produces honey which either they eat or the beekeepers take
Make honey.
No honey bees for the honey.
the tools that beekeepers use are honey and nectar additionally pollen
Honey is farmed through beekeeping, where beekeepers maintain hives to cultivate honeybees. The process involves placing hives in locations with abundant flowering plants, allowing bees to collect nectar. Beekeepers then harvest the honey by removing honey-filled frames from the hive, extracting the honey using a centrifuge, and filtering it before packaging. Proper care and management of the bees are essential to ensure their health and productivity.
Commercial honey production involves several key steps, starting with beekeeping, where beekeepers maintain colonies of honeybees in hives. Bees collect nectar from flowers, which they convert into honey through a process of digestion and evaporation. Once the honey is ready, beekeepers harvest it by removing the honey-filled frames from the hives, extracting the honey using a centrifuge, and filtering it to remove impurities. Finally, the honey is packaged and prepared for sale, often undergoing pasteurization to improve shelf life.
Beekeepers
Bees collect nectar for food. Because raw nectar would not store for very long without fermenting, bee convert the surplus of nectar they collect into honey to use as food when nectar is not available. It is this surplus honey that we collect. Beekeepers then replace the honey with sugar syrup which, for the bees, is just as good.
They don't usually. The bees make honey in the hive.
Apiculture. Or commonly, just beekeeping.