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Bee Research By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class 2007
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Bee Research By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class 2007. Honeybees and Honey Honeybees make honey so they have food to eat.

Dec 14, 2015

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Kathy Hortin
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Page 1: Bee Research By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class 2007. Honeybees and Honey Honeybees make honey so they have food to eat.

Bee Research

By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class

2007

Page 2: Bee Research By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class 2007. Honeybees and Honey Honeybees make honey so they have food to eat.

Honeybees and Honey

Honeybees make honey so they have food to eat.

Page 3: Bee Research By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class 2007. Honeybees and Honey Honeybees make honey so they have food to eat.

Honeybees cannot get nectar in the winter so they must make plenty of honey to survive.

Page 4: Bee Research By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class 2007. Honeybees and Honey Honeybees make honey so they have food to eat.

A honeybee can visit up to 10,000 flowers a day to get nectar and pollen. That makes only one

teaspoon of honey.

Page 5: Bee Research By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class 2007. Honeybees and Honey Honeybees make honey so they have food to eat.

It takes nectar and pollen from one million flowers to make one pound of honey.

Page 6: Bee Research By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class 2007. Honeybees and Honey Honeybees make honey so they have food to eat.

Egg

The queen bee lays many eggs. This is the first stage of a bee’s life. The worker bee takes 21 days to become an adult. The drone takes 24 and the queen takes 16 days.

Page 7: Bee Research By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class 2007. Honeybees and Honey Honeybees make honey so they have food to eat.

Larva

The baby bee is very small at this stage.

It takes 3 days to become a pupa.

Page 8: Bee Research By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class 2007. Honeybees and Honey Honeybees make honey so they have food to eat.

Pupa

A pupa is a little white worm.

The pupa spins a silky cocoon around itself during this stage.

Page 9: Bee Research By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class 2007. Honeybees and Honey Honeybees make honey so they have food to eat.

Adult

• The drone lives 1 to 2 seasons.• Queen bees live 3 to 5 years.• The worker lives 3 weeks.

Page 10: Bee Research By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class 2007. Honeybees and Honey Honeybees make honey so they have food to eat.

Where do honeybees live?

Page 11: Bee Research By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class 2007. Honeybees and Honey Honeybees make honey so they have food to eat.

They live in all parts of the world except the Arctic and Antarctic.

Page 12: Bee Research By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class 2007. Honeybees and Honey Honeybees make honey so they have food to eat.

The honeybees live in a colony in a beehive.

Page 13: Bee Research By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class 2007. Honeybees and Honey Honeybees make honey so they have food to eat.

60`000 honeybees live in a hive.

Page 14: Bee Research By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class 2007. Honeybees and Honey Honeybees make honey so they have food to eat.

What jobs do honeybees have?

Page 15: Bee Research By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class 2007. Honeybees and Honey Honeybees make honey so they have food to eat.

Worker Bees/Forager Bees

Worker bees build honeycombs,

feed the larvae and clean the hive.

Page 16: Bee Research By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class 2007. Honeybees and Honey Honeybees make honey so they have food to eat.

Drone Bees

The drones mate with the queen bee.

Page 17: Bee Research By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class 2007. Honeybees and Honey Honeybees make honey so they have food to eat.

Queen Bees

The queen bee lays eggs and is the ruler of the hive.

Page 18: Bee Research By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class 2007. Honeybees and Honey Honeybees make honey so they have food to eat.

The Honeymakers

Page 19: Bee Research By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class 2007. Honeybees and Honey Honeybees make honey so they have food to eat.

Making Honey

First, a bee collects nectar

Next it turns the nectar into sweet honey

Page 20: Bee Research By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class 2007. Honeybees and Honey Honeybees make honey so they have food to eat.

Finally the honey is put into cells called honeycombs and then a cap of bees wax is put onto the top of the

honeycomb.

Then a beekeeper comes and puts the honey in jars to sell to people.

Page 21: Bee Research By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class 2007. Honeybees and Honey Honeybees make honey so they have food to eat.

Interesting Facts

It takes one million flowers to make a pound of honey.

The female workers (forager bees) collect the nectar.

Page 22: Bee Research By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class 2007. Honeybees and Honey Honeybees make honey so they have food to eat.

The taste and color depends on the nectar.

Page 23: Bee Research By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class 2007. Honeybees and Honey Honeybees make honey so they have food to eat.

Honey Bee Communication

Page 24: Bee Research By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class 2007. Honeybees and Honey Honeybees make honey so they have food to eat.

Honeybees communicate one way by doing a dance called the round dance which tells the estimate of the distance between the hive and the flowers.

Round Dance

Page 25: Bee Research By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class 2007. Honeybees and Honey Honeybees make honey so they have food to eat.

Honeybees also have another dance called the waggle dance that they use to say the exact distance between the hive and the flowers.

Waggle Dance

Page 26: Bee Research By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class 2007. Honeybees and Honey Honeybees make honey so they have food to eat.

Honeybees also smell to communicate. The smell is called pheromone. The worker bees smell this and it tells them if they can get back to work or have to help the queen.

Pheromone

Page 27: Bee Research By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class 2007. Honeybees and Honey Honeybees make honey so they have food to eat.

How honeybees help flowers and crops

Page 28: Bee Research By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class 2007. Honeybees and Honey Honeybees make honey so they have food to eat.

Bees pollinate the same plant for several days.

A bee is searching for a blossom.

Page 29: Bee Research By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class 2007. Honeybees and Honey Honeybees make honey so they have food to eat.

A honeybee pollinates crops and helps make seeds.

Pollen will stick to a honeybee’s body.

Page 30: Bee Research By Ms. Kuykendall’s Class 2007. Honeybees and Honey Honeybees make honey so they have food to eat.

The seeds grow and soon become fruit.