On its rear legs on the equivalent of what would be a knee on a human.
The orange growth on the back leg of a honey bee is likely pollen collected from flowers. Honey bees gather pollen on their hind legs in specialized structures called pollen baskets, which are located on their back legs. This pollen will be taken back to the hive and used as food for the colony.
A honey bee carries pollen on its hind legs in a 'honey basket' on what would be knees on a human.
pollen
Pollen and nectar.
pollen not honey
The pollen baskets on a honey bee are specifically for pollen. The bee collects nectar with its tongue and stores it in a sac within its body to transport it back to the hive.
The orange growth on the back leg of a honey bee is likely pollen collected from flowers. Honey bees gather pollen on their hind legs in specialized structures called pollen baskets, which are located on their back legs. This pollen will be taken back to the hive and used as food for the colony.
Bees don't have pockets but on their back legs there is a depressed area called the corbicula - the common name is pollen basket. As the bee flies back from the flower, she combs the pollen off of herself and packs it into the pollen basket on her back legs. When she arrives at the hive, she has two neat little packets of pollen on each of her back legs and is back to looking like a normal bee rather than one who has taken a bath in pollen!
A honey bee carries pollen on its hind legs in a 'honey basket' on what would be knees on a human.
Behind its rear legs. The equivalent in a human would be behind the knees.
Bee pollen is protein.
Another way of saying bee pollen is bee bread. Bee pollen is full of nutrients and many health food stores carry it in capsule form so it is easy for people to get the benefits of bee pollen.
The bee sees pollen with its eyes. It carries pollen because the pollen stick to the hind legs!
مکھی جرگ
Bee pollen comes from a bee's body after he has visited many flowers. Health food stores often sell bottled bee pollen as purported remedy for a number of different things. Bee pollen as a treatment has not been backed by science, and really just takes valuable pollen away from the bee.
The pollen basket of a honey bee is located on the tibia and first tarsal segment of their hind legs.
A single bee can carry up to 20 milligrams of pollen on its hind legs. This amount can vary depending on the species of bee and the size of its pollen baskets.