enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Bee learning and communication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bee_learning_and_communication

    Younger bees play a role inside the hive while older bees play a role outside the hive mostly as foragers. Huang's team found that forager bees gather and carry a chemical called ethyl oleate in the stomach. The forager bees feed this primer pheromone to the worker bees, and the chemical keeps them in a nurse bee state.

  3. List of Northern American nectar sources for honey bees

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Northern_American...

    A honey bee collecting nectar from an apricot flower.. The nectar resource in a given area depends on the kinds of flowering plants present and their blooming periods. Which kinds grow in an area depends on soil texture, soil pH, soil drainage, daily maximum and minimum temperatures, precipitation, extreme minimum winter temperature, and growing degre

  4. List of pollen sources - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_pollen_sources

    Dry pollen, is a food source for bees, which may contain 16–30% protein, 1–10% fat, 1–7% starch, many vitamins, some micro nutrients, and possibly a little sugar. The protein source needed for rearing one worker bee from larval to adult stage requires approximately 120 to 145 mg of pollen.

  5. Bee pollen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bee_pollen

    Bee pollen, also known as bee bread and ambrosia, [1] is a ball or pellet of field-gathered flower pollen packed by worker honeybees, and used as the primary food source for the hive. It consists of simple sugars , protein , minerals and vitamins , fatty acids , and a small percentage of other components.

  6. Vulture bee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vulture_bee

    Vulture bees are reddish-brown in colour, featuring only a few lighter hairs on their thorax, and range in length from 8–22 millimetres (0.31–0.87 in). [1] As with many types of stingless bee, vulture bees have strong, powerful mandibles, which are used to tear off flesh. Vulture bees have been recorded as foraging from more than 75 ...

  7. Waggle dance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waggle_dance

    Waggle dancing bees that have been in the nest for an extended time adjust the angles of their dances to accommodate the changing direction of the sun. Therefore, bees that follow the waggle run of the dance are still correctly led to the food source even though its angle relative to the sun has changed.

  8. Information - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Information

    The colored light reflected from a flower is too weak for photosynthesis but the visual system of the bee detects it and the bee's nervous system uses the information to guide the bee to the flower, where the bee often finds nectar or pollen, which are causal inputs, a nutritional function.

  9. Forage (honey bee) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forage_(honey_bee)

    European honey bee collecting nectar and pollen European honey bee flies back to the hive after collecting pollen. Pollen is temporarily stored in pollen baskets on the bees' legs For bees , their forage or food supply consists of nectar and pollen from blooming plants within their flight range.