Although we think of bees as nasty insects that want to sting us, they are not. Other insects destroy crops, bite, or are an irritating nuisance.But honey bees is essential to the welfare of mankind. Not only does it provide man with honey-a delightful food with many delicate flavors-but, more important, the honey bee insures that plants like tomatoes and apples can get pollinated and grow for us to eat.

Without the fruit and vegetables that require pollination for productivity our planet would seem very dead. Bees help keep the lifecycle going on our planet and really want to help us.













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Honey bees, like other bees, are wild rather than domesticated. The species would survive in the wild state without any interference from man and its behavior would continue to be unchanged. Any success man has attained in utilizing honey bees for their productivity is the result of his close study of their natural instincts and behavior. He has used this knowledge to develop management practices that permit him to operate them for his own benefit.

All bees, including the honey bee, have branched hairs covering their bodies. This is one of the important characteristics that distinguishes bees from other insects. These branched hairs become dusted with pollen grains as they visit the flowers. The pollen of a different flower of the same species usually competes well in the fertilization process with pollen from the flower being pollinated. Since a bee may visit 100 to 400 blossoms during each trip to the field, cross- pollination is effected by distribution of pollen grains from the anthers of one flower to the stigma of another.