Yes, bees do collect the nectar from a daffodil. They also transfer pollens from one plant to another to pollinate these plants. Hummingbirds are often responsible for gathering the nectar later in the season.
Worker honeybees keep the colony clean, look after younger bees, and collect pollen and nectar.
No. Bees make honey from nectar. Although the honey may contain a small amount of pollen from the flowers from which the nectar was collected, this is accidental.Bees do collect pollen and bring it back to the hive, but this is used as food, particularly for the developing larvae.
So-called killer bees, more properly called Africanized honey bees, eat the same as any other honey bee: pollen and nectar.
Bees collect nectar from flowers to make honey in a bee hive. They collect the nectar by sucking with their proboscis and having nectar stuck to the hair on their legs. The bee goes to different flowers to collect honey they remember the flower and where they last got the nectar. But; forget what the plant was like such as one that tries to trap the insect in a pool of sticky liquid so that it dies but, most are able to get out.
Bees don't make pollen, they collect it from the flowers they visit.Bees have concave areas on the tibias of their back legs, surrounded by hairs. These are called pollen baskets or corbiculae, and as the bee forages for nectar, it brushes any pollen from its head and body back to the pollen baskets and packs it in.The pollen is taken back to the hive, where it is stored and used for food. It is a rich protein source.
No that's aphids, bees are collect pollen and nectar. No, bees collect nectar from nectary glands and pollen from the anthers in their pollen sacks. A lot of pollen also gets stuck to them elsewhere, and this can brush off in other flowers to pollinate them.
If you might have noticed a recent answer, which was pollen, that answer is wrong. Bees collect nectar, which they turn into honey. pollen sticks to their legs and falls onto other flowers. this is called pollination.
Not sure what you mean by the opposite of nectar. Bees collect nectar and pollen from flowers.
To feed themselves and their young.
To collect pollen and nectar.
To collect nectar and pollen.
Bees eat nectar and pollen that they collect off of the flowers. Honey bees will even eat the honey that they make from the pollen that they collect.
Bees collect nectar from flowers and other plants and turn it into honey. Pollen is collected from similar sources and mainly used to feed pupae and larvae (unborn bees) as pollen is protein rich.
Honey bees collect nectar and pollen from flowers and other plants.
No they make honey. They collect nectar and pollen.
Bees collect pollen and nectar from open flowers, and they also collect propolis -- a resinous substance -- from buds, particularly tree buds.
they mostly collect pollen and nectar in the day