bees need pollen because they will make more hony so we can eat and so that is all:)
I sprinkle some bee pollen on my granola and hempmilk in the morning and it tastes really good!
no a bee is not a plant eater instead it takes a substance that flowers produce called pollen.
A bee has to adapt somethinf to get pollen off of a flower and a plant has to evolve a way to get the pollen to the bee.
It doesn't hurt the bee, if that's what you are wondering. Actually, the bee isn't trying to collect pollen at all. Bees stop on flowers to collect nectar, and the pollen clings to the fluff on their bodies. When the bee stops at another flower, the pollen from another plant is brushed onto the flower. This is one way that flowers reproduce. The nectar collected by the bee then goes on to become honey after it is taken back to the hive. So, when a bee takes pollen from a flower, it is neither good nor bad, but a neutral interaction.
This pollen transfer helps in plant reproduction by allowing the bee to transfer pollen from one flower to another, enabling fertilization. This process leads to the formation of seeds and fruits, essential for the plant's reproduction and genetic diversity.
Pollen mate, so it can pollinate the plant
pollenation
Bee pollen is protein.
Becouse it needs a bee to put pollen on it
Pollen sticks to the hairs. when the bee moves from plant to plant it will cross-pollenate the next plant . This is a perfect case of nature devloping a system to help ensure survival.
Yes, the flower benefits when the bee collects pollen from it because the pollen is transferred to other flowers during the bee's pollination process, helping with fertilization and reproduction. This allows the flower to produce seeds and fruit for the next generation.
yes .no . yes no but yeah but no am i bothered