Bees don't hibernate, but if the weather is too cold they can't fly out of the hive - and in winter there would probably be no flowers anyway. So, they collect a surplus of food when there is plenty available and store it for the winter. Honey can best be described as concentrated nectar.
*Facepalm* Bees don't eat honey....they make it.
No. Bees eat honey that they make from nectar of flowers.
Yes, that's why they make it. Bees make honey and store it so they have food when they are unable to forage for nectar.
the honey they make !
Honey bees make honey. They live in colonies and store the honey to feed the larvae. Most solitary bees, such as bumble bees, make only a little of a honey-like substance which they eat themselves.
Honey bees do not eat mud. They eat nectar and pollen from flowers, as well as the honey that they make from nectar.
Bees eat nectar and pollen that they collect off of the flowers. Honey bees will even eat the honey that they make from the pollen that they collect.
honey bees eat no insects but do eat nectar
The reason why bees eat honey is because it taste good.
honey bees eat honey
They take the nectar from flowers to make honey.
Forager bees collect nectar and pollen, and bring them back to the hive where they are stored. Water is evaporated from the nectar, turning it into honey. Bees eat pollen, a rich source of protein, and honey, which is a carbohydrate.