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Keyword: Sweet


Overview - a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z

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Bees are vegetarians, mainly living on sweet plant juice. Pollen serves as their supply of protein. Some bees live in colonies. Most of the bees are solitary. Sometimes solitary bees live in small commons. The small commons primarily enable the solitary bees to rear their offspring together a...
>> Bees
...ne of hair which the bee uses to brush off pollen remains. Pollen is transported to the hive in "baskets" made out of an arrangement of hairs, also located on the hind legs. Like all bees, the honey bee has mouth parts, which can lap up sweet plant secretions (nectar and honeydew). Nectar is transported in part of the stomach called the "honey stomach". Other bees on the same level in the hive are supplied with nectar by this bee.
>> Bees -> Honey Bees
Pollen
...oncentration is at its highest in the morning, in the city, in the evening. Consequently rural inhabitants are advised to air between seven pm and midnight and city dwellers, between six and eight am. Pollen is used in food production. It tastes sweet and has a high content of proteins with enzymatic function, vitamin B and over 20 amino acids. Pollen is thought to aid in the treatment of digestive problems, hair loss, potentially fertility problems, diseases of the nervous system, as well as hay...
>> Bees -> Honey Bees -> Products of bees
Camponotus ligniperda prefer warm and dry habitats. They live in deciduous forests, mixed forests and grasslands with shrubs. They feed on honeydew from aphids and on the sweet and juicy parts of plants. They also prey on other creatures. The area in which these ants forage for food has a radius of about 40 metres.
>> Ants -> Camponotus ligniperda
Auchenorrhyncha feed on the sweet juices of individual or multiple plant species. They move by flying forwards, running or jumping. They develop from egg to larva and from their last larval stage to adult insects without pupating. Auchenorrhyncha produce sounds. However, only thos...
>> Cicadas
...from February-November and in Northern Europe from May to September/October. They prefer habitats such as forest edges, riverbanks, streams, lakes, meadows and wetlands, where they can often be found on foliage and flowers in the sun. They live on sweet nectar and other fluids rich in carbohydrates from plants such as common hogweed (Heracleum sphondylium), coltsfoot (Tussilago farfara) and goat willow (Salix caprea).
>> Flies -> black scavenger flies -> Lesser dung fly
...s more frequently and is found in various habitats. They occur in particularly large numbers everywhere where old, rotting meat or faeces can be found. The adults often sit on trees, shrubs and herbaceous flowering plants, where they feed on nectar, sweet plant juices, ripe fruit juice or honeydew from aphids. However they also like the protein-rich fluid from dung or carrion. Some of the adult flies overwinter.
>> Flies -> Flesh-fly -> Grey fleshfly


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