i forgot < IGNORE THAT ussualy bears or honey badgers will try to eat bees also hornets, frogs
their are these animals that are called grazers like deer , horses , cows ect, also called omnivores the animals like these that are found were bears are would be the ones that they eat
Bees also eat pollen, which provides them with essential nutrients like protein and fats. Additionally, some bees may consume plant sap or honeydew produced by aphids. However, the primary food sources for bees are nectar and honey.
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 because it is a source of energy for them. Nectar is rich in sugars, which provide them with the carbohydrates they need to fuel their activities, such as flying and foraging. Bees also collect nectar to make honey, which is stored as food for the colony.
Bees will eat most sugary things,they like honey the most.I have read most articles and everyone else said that they eat honey.Read more: http://wiki.answers.com/What_does_bees_eat#ixzz1UYIx1CCH
no because the spider would try to like bit the bee and it would it would die instanly so no
well bees eat polen so you would put the flower then the bee then a brid or any other kind of animal really a lot of things eat bees
no. bees are vegeterien but they would attack and kill other insects in defence of the queen and the hive
yes. But I don't think they would want to.
Without bees, we would be missing much of our food. Bees pollinate any of the fruits and vegetables we eat, along with some grains, and grasses.
I would say a gnat is the lightest, The goliath beetle is the heaviest, and bees and wasps eat honey and nectar.
honey bees eat no insects but do eat nectar
No. Bees eat honey that they make from nectar of flowers.
Bees eat pollen and nectar from flowers for lunch.
If we don't have bees, then we would not have honey. The animals that eat bees might starve and then the food chain might break. Flowers will not be pollinated as quickly as only moths and butterflies can do it. Bees are in fact very important.
A skunk
Burrowing bees eat pollen and nectar, just like any other kind of bees.