Where bees bring pollen is called a "hive." The hive is their home and the place where they store pollen, honey, and raise their young bees.
Bees are fuzzy. How do you think this trait can help bees carry pollen?
Bees collect pollen on their hairy bodies as they move from flower to flower. The pollen sticks to their bodies and is then carried back to the hive in special pollen baskets on their hind legs. This pollen is used as food for the bees and to help pollinate other flowers.
Bees collect pollen to feed their young larvae and for their own nutrition. Pollen is a rich source of proteins, vitamins, and minerals that are essential for the growth and development of bee colonies.
Bees take pollen to make honey.
The Stigma
no because honey bees pollen
Where bees bring pollen is called a "hive." The hive is their home and the place where they store pollen, honey, and raise their young bees.
When bees are collecting pollen, the grains stick to specialized hairs around the knee joint of their hind legs, forming sacs. After an hour of collecting a build up of pollen grains, usually yellowish in color, is quite visible on the hind legs. The fuzzy hairs, stickiness of the pollen and electrostatic electricity contribute to the build up of these sacs.
Flowers contain pollen and bees carry it to other flowers but some flowers can spread their own pollen.
pollen
pollen and necter pollen and necter
They bring the pollen to other flowers.
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.
Male bees use nectar for food. Female bees use pollen for feeding the larvae, and nectar and pollen for own food.
Bees are fuzzy. How do you think this trait can help bees carry pollen?
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.