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[4] [10] The bees can eat the raw materials like pollen and nectar of the flowers but most bees in the colony eat honey that is made using the raw materials since it has higher nutritional value. To create honey, the bees consume the pollen and the nectar, and then regurgitate them, mixing them with enzymes in their stomachs. [5]
Honey bees, bumblebees, solitary bees: fruit 4-essential 1-3 temperate Tangerine: Citrus tangerina: Honey bees, bumblebees: fruit 1-little sub-tropical Orange, grapefruit, tangelo: Citrus spp. Honey bees, bumblebees: fruit 1-little sub-tropical Coconut: Cocos nucifera: Honey bees, stingless bees: nut 2-modest tropical Coffee Coffea spp.
A bumblebee (or bumble bee, bumble-bee, or humble-bee) is any of over 250 species in the genus Bombus, part of Apidae, one of the bee families. This genus is the only extant group in the tribe Bombini, though a few extinct related genera (e.g., Calyptapis) are known from fossils.
Bees from Bombus and Xylocopa are thought to pollinate these flowers because their adaptive behavior allows them to easily extract pollen that is less available to other insects. [9] Since bees have a source of plentiful pollen that they do not have to compete with other insects for, they are more likely to visit these flowers.
Several fly species are Batesian mimics of bumble bees, including robber flies, flower flies, deer bot flies, and bee flies. Some species of beetles, moths, sawflies and even other bees will mimic bumble bees. Additionally, the bumble flower beetle does not mimic the bumble bee's coloration but its buzzing flight sound. [8]
Because they do not depend on any one flower type, they are considered to be excellent pollinators. bumble bees are also able to fly in cooler temperatures and lower flight levels than many other bees. [9] Additionally, bumble bees perform "buzz pollination". This behavior is displayed when a bumble bee grabs the pollen-producing structure of ...
Bumble bees – just like humans and dogs – like to play with balls, UK scientists have found. Researchers have, for the first time, observed insects interacting with inanimate objects as a form ...
Some species, like the bumble bees Bombus appositus or B. occidentalis and many species of nectar-feeding birds can distinguish between robbed and unrobbed plants and minimize their energy cost of foraging by avoiding heavily robbed flowers. [13] [15] Pollinating birds may be better at this than insects, because of their higher sensory ...