a little bit but mostly nectar
Yes, roses are pollinated by bees. Bees are attracted to the colorful petals and fragrance of roses, and as they collect nectar from the flowers, they inadvertently transfer pollen from one flower to another, resulting in pollination.
No, a rose it not wind pollinated. Roses are pollinated by bees. A bee will collect nectar in the "pockets" on *her legs and as she flies some of the pollen may fall out there for creating a new flower * all worker bees (one that collects pollen and nectar) are female
Yes, bees collect nectar from flowers of the plants
Greenfly use their mouthparts to pierce the stems and leaves of the rose and drink the plant's sap which contains sugars and other nutrients.With bees it is a little more complicated. For a single-flowered rose or for a variety where the petals open wide, bees can get to the nectaries and they will take the nectar. For double-flowered roses the nectaries are hidden by the petals, and the bee's proboscis is not long enough to reach them. But, as the greenfly are feeding they will excrete droplets of a sugary liquid called honeydew and the bees sometimes will take this.Generally, it is ants that feed off greenfly honeydew rather than bees.
Male bees use nectar for food. Female bees use pollen for feeding the larvae, and nectar and pollen for own food.
nectar (Bees gather nectar from flowers and turn it into honey.)
Bees get their nectar from flowers. Flowers produce nectar to attract animals to pollinate them.
The sweet fluid produced by plants and collected by bees is known as nectar.
yes roses do have nectar thats why bees are attracted to them
The flowers carry nectar, so when the bees collect the nectar they eat it. That helps produce the honey. The nectar in the flowers is the bees food source. Without flowers, the bees would all die out.
Nectar.
nectar is what the bees drink