Well, technically, yes, but barf is when your stomach cannot handle what's in there. It's REALLY called regurgitation because barfing is an unwilling act, while regurgitation is a forced act on the body. Honey is just the regurgitation from a bee, so it isn't bee's barf, but bee's regurgitation.
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And, strictly speaking, nectar is carried in the bee's honey crop, which is not part of the digestive tract, so it is not being regurgitated from the stomach -- so is not barf.
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.
No, but it came from bees, as you all know, which are living things.
Most plants require insects to transfer pollen from one flower to another, and most of this pollination is done by bees. Without pollination, plants would not produce seeds or fruit, so bees are not just useful, they are essential for life as we know it.
Bees like honey and nectar even though they need nectar in order to produce honey. Floral nectar is rich in the sucrose that gives bees energy to fly from flower to flower and transport nectar and pollen loads back to the hive or nest. Back at the hive or nest, the bee uses the enzyme invertase to transform nectar into dextrose- and laevulose-rich solutions that we know as carbohydrate-rich honey.
The answer to this question is quite simple Flaurise flowers are the most flavoured flowers providing the most flavour The worker bees generally dont know this and tend to go for less flavoured flowers Hope this answer helps written by professor eliza kennedy
The thing is, there's something you should know: honey is made from regurgitated flower nectar. ... That processor bee then stores the nectar in its honey crop and regurgitates it to a bee that's closer to the honeycomb for storage. So, honey is really the vomit of many bees combined. sorry for it!
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.
I can assure you I am no expert, but I am pretty sure that bees do not eat their honey. What they do is fly around to flowers, take the nectar, and bring it back to thier hive to make honey. So actually yes, I guess they do eat honey. But they'd do it in their hive, so you'd never see them.
you can see if bees like sweet honey better or sour honey or if bees can feel small virbrations :P
Mainly nectar and pollen regurgitated repeatedly. Regurgitate means to spit up after being swallowed, but it cannot be used in place of the word 'vomit'. Honey is to feed the starving bee larvae as food but the bees' effort goes to waste as we steal honey and consume it as OUR food. Did you know that just a large tablespoon of honey takes over a million flowers? And bees work until they DIE. They work the moment they are born!
Bees don't have a large enough brain to undertake logical thought, so really the answer is no. Honey making is purely instinctual.
Not as far as I know. What does a dictionary say it is?
The bees that die : Honey bee. The bees do not die : Hornets, Yellowjackets/wasps, and bumblebees. those are the bees i know that die/do not die
No, but it came from bees, as you all know, which are living things.
Your questions is very confusing ... no one can plant honey don't you know that ... but to get honey their are bees and the more flowers we get the more bees get honey put them in their hive and we get from their hive .... we also can get honey from flowers ourselves.... i don't know much even being a bangladeshi ..cause stay in Kuwait ...
Um.Dumb question but if u need 2 know honey bees aren't as visious as killer bees .therefore killer bees attack more.while,honey bees are humble and do what they do best make honey from flowers nectar
Honey bees collect nectar from flowers, which contains natural sugars like sucrose and glucose. They then store the nectar in their honey stomach, where enzymes break down the sugars into fructose and glucose. These simpler sugars are then concentrated as the bees fan and remove excess moisture from the nectar in the hive, resulting in the sweet honey we know.