Kudzu
The flower's sweet nectar attracts bees to pollinate it. Bees gather nectar and make it into honey.
To collect pollen and nectar.
Bees want the nectar to make honey. The bees move pollen from flower to flower while they gather the nectar.
They take the nectar from flowers to make honey.
Bees like honey and nectar even though they need nectar in order to produce honey. Floral nectar is rich in the sucrose that gives bees energy to fly from flower to flower and transport nectar and pollen loads back to the hive or nest. Back at the hive or nest, the bee uses the enzyme invertase to transform nectar into dextrose- and laevulose-rich solutions that we know as carbohydrate-rich honey.
Bees make honey from nectar gathered from flowers. If there are no nectar-bearing flowers available, then the bees can't make honey. Nor will there be any nectar to feed on, so they will feed on their stored honey.
#1 they go for bright flowers first of all #2 they use more necter to make honey
Bees eat pollen as well as nectar and honey.
Purple flower, sweet nectar the rest depend on temperature
Bees collect nectar from flowers and then produce 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.
Bumble bees live on pretty much the same diet as honey bees: pollen and nectar (the basis of honey).