In the wild, the honey would be a food store for the following winter, when nectar was not available.
If a beekeeper takes honey from the hive he will always make sure the bees have enough food for the winter, supplementing it with sugar syrup if necessary.
Jasmine plants are generally self-pollinating, meaning they have both male and female reproductive organs within the same flower and can fertilize themselves without the need for cross-pollination from another plant.
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.
the relationship is mutualism, just so you know. :D the bee uses the pollen to create honey, which it can't live without, and the flower relies on the bee to pollinate it to keep the species alive. ex. when the bee gets the pollen stuck to it's legs, it flies to another flower and the flower creates seeds.
Let us consider the bee, which is the most famous, and the most useful pollinating organism. The bee comes to a flower in order to drink the nectar and eat the pollen, but the bee is also covered with hair (the bee hair consists of extrusions of chitin, it is not the same as mamallian hair) and lots of pollen sticks to it. When the bee then visits other flowers, it brings with it the pollen that it picked up at an earlier flower. If some of that pollen gets into the right place on the new flower (the right place being the pistil) then it will pollinate the flower.
If the insect carries pollen from one flower to another, it can facilitate cross-pollination, leading to the fertilization and production of seeds in the second flower. This can enhance genetic diversity, improve reproductive success, and potentially increase biodiversity in the ecosystem.
Basically the bee is doing the pollinating for the flower. They both benefit and need each other.
if the bee receives pollen or nectar both sides benefit but that is not always the case.
It collects the nectar and pollen (pollinating the flower).
a long narrow beak
Jasmine plants are generally self-pollinating, meaning they have both male and female reproductive organs within the same flower and can fertilize themselves without the need for cross-pollination from another plant.
usually just the fact that it's a flower and bees like flowers,but there is an orchid bee which is a bee that resembles a orchid and the males are very attracted to the orchids for there oil and fragrance and need it to store in their bodies.
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, but not honey bees, they are not strong enough. Tomatoes are pollinated by bumble bees. The bee grasps the flower and shakes it to release the pollen. If you watch a bee pollinating tomato flowers you will hear a high-pitched buzz as it does it.
The purpose of the flower it to attract pollinating insects to the sexual parts of the flower.
They are artificially pollinating the flowers. If a bee come along then the hairs on it's legs will pick up pollen and then move on to the next flower and some of the pollen will fall of and into the flower. The gardener is trying to act like a bee and pollinate his tomatoes so he gets more tomatoes from every plant.
A species of orchid from Israel that looks and smells like a female bee tricks male long-horned bees into pollinating them.
yes a flower provide shelter for a bee