Honey bees carry pollen and nectar in two ways. The most common way is by the hairs on their legs and stomach which pollen sticks to. Some bees also have hollow areas on their legs which can carry food as well.
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.
Honey bees assist with pollination i.e they carry pollen from one plant to another, while collecting nectar, which is crucial to growing crops. They eventually use the nectar to make honey.
Bees collect nectar from flowers and then produce honey.
Bumble bees live on pretty much the same diet as honey bees: pollen and nectar (the basis of honey).
Honey bees get honey by sucking nectar out of plants. In the hive, this nectar is converted to honey. Different bees make different honey, so as you can imagine, there are a lot of different kinds of honey.
Honey bees produce honey by collecting nectar from flowers using their long, tube-shaped tongues, and storing it in their "honey stomach" to carry back to the hive. Once back at the hive, the bees pass the nectar to other worker bees who chew it and store it in honeycomb cells. The bees then fan the nectar with their wings to remove excess moisture, creating thick, sticky honey that is stored for food.
nectar (Bees gather nectar from flowers and turn it into honey.)
Yes, honey bees eat nectar and pollen.
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. Honey is a substance obtained from bees. Bees produce honey from pollen, not nectar.
Nectar
Honey bees get pollen on their feet and legs, and carry that pollen to the next flowering plant, tree, or shrub. Bees pollinate so the plants mature.