Bees don't wake up in the morning and think 'I must go and pollinate some flowers today.' They visit the flowers for one purpose only: to get food. They live on nectar and pollen, both of which they get from flowers. In going from flower to flower to collect food they just happen to transfer some pollen from one flower to the next. The flowers give the nectar in order to encourage the bees to visit.
pollenate
Bees pollinate lots of different types of plants.
There would be no bees to pollenate the flowers.
They make flowers grow and pollenate
Mostly insects, such as bees that pollenate flowers.
Mainly to attract bees and other insects that will pollenate them.
Bees of all varieties pollenate flowers, but not all bees do so. This may seem a contradiction, but only the worker bees pollinate, not the queens or drones.
Wait for the flowers to appear... Then - wipe the flowers with a cotton bud, and transfer the pollen to other flowers on the plant.
The suffix for the word "pollen" is "-en".
they love to collect fluids from flowering plants, pollen, and cross-pollenate by gathering fluid from one plant then it goes to another plant lands and causes some of the fluid to intermingle with the other plant. Ultimately, without bees there will be NO fruit.
Find someone with a flower patch module and put one of your worker bees on it. If you need someone with a flower patch module look up sasquatch2011.
Blue-banded bees are not used for cross-pollination with genetically modified crops. Although it would be a very rare occurrence, they might visit genetically modified crops if they nest in the neighbourhood, and might crosspollinate them.