How Bees Make Honey

in blurt •  2 years ago 

It has been remarked that, aside from man, nothing in the world compares to the remarkable efficiency of the honeybee industry. Inside the beehive, each bee has a specific task to complete, and the entire process operates smoothly.


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Bees require two types of food. One type of honey is nectar honey, which is formed from the sweet fluid that accumulates in the center of flowers. The other originates from flower anthers, which contain countless tiny grains known as pollen. Pollen, like flowers, comes in a variety of colors.

Let us accompany the honeybee from her blossom to the hive and observe what occurs. Most bees solely collect pollen or nectar. As she drinks nectar from the blossom, it is stored in her unique honey stomach and sent to the honey-making bees in the hive. If she becomes hungry, she opens a valve in the nectar "sac," allowing some of the cargo to flow through to her stomach and be converted to energy for her own needs.

The bee is an amazing flying mechanism. She can transport a cargo of nectar or pollen that is comparable to her own weight. Consider that even the most modern airplane design can only take off with a load one-quarter of its own weight.

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When forager bees are three weeks old, they leave the hive in search of bloom patches. They have a lot of work to do and just six or seven weeks to complete it since they survive to be six or seven weeks old.
There will be many more bees working at the same time, and their droning will fill the air. It takes around three weeks for 300 bees to collect 450 g of honey. A hive typically comprises 40,000 bees.

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