You could collect nectar and evaporate most of the water from it and you would have something not unlike honey, but you would be missing one important stage. When bees initially swallow the nectar it includes a little of their saliva, the enzymes in which break the more complex sugars in nectar down to glucose and fructose, so your 'concentrated nectar' would not be the same as true honey.
All honey is made by bees, therefore it is natural. If it is not made by bees then it is not honey.
No, honey bees are insects that produce honey as a food source. Honey bees collect nectar from flowers and use it to make honey, which they store in their hives as a source of energy. Honey bees are not made out of honey.
No, only Bees produce honey.
Honey is the sweet substance made by bees. Bees collect nectar from flowers, then store and process it in their hives, creating honey as a food source. Honey is widely used in cooking, baking, and as a natural sweetener.
honey
Bees make beeswax and use it to form chambers where they store honey. There are no actual bee parts or honey in beeswax.
Honey
No. Honey is made in a honeycomb, out of pollen that bees bring back to the hive on their legs.
To those people who think honey is made from honey bees, you're wrong. In America, it might be made from honey bees but it actually is produced by hornets. The person who answered this is completely wrong. Although SOME species of hornet do produce honey, it's toxicology makes it poisonous to humans. Honey comes from HONEY BEES, hence the name honey bee. Hornets do not produce honey consumable by humans. Whether it be from European or African bees ( aka killer bees ) , the honey we consume comes from honey bees. Another interesting fact is that honey is the only product of an insect that humans consume.
The bees home is made of wax and honey. It is found in trees. Bees nourish youth in the hive. Honey is also made in the hive.
No, honey is not the saliva of bees. Honey is made from nectar collected by bees from flowers, which is then stored, mixed with enzymes, and dehydrated in the beehive to create the thick, sweet substance we know as honey.
Honey badgers rely on bees for food, particularly the honey and larvae found in beehives. They have developed a specialized adaptation where they are able to withstand bee stings, allowing them to access this food source. Without bees and their honey, the survival of honey badgers would be impacted.