How Do Bees Make Honey?
Question: How Do Bees Make Honey?
Honey bees
use their stores of energy-rich honey to get them through lean times, including
winter. Worker bees gather nectar from flowers and convert it into enough honey
to keep the colony alive. How do bees make honey from nectar?
Answer:
Nectar contains about 80% water,
along with complex sugars. Left in its natural state, nectar would ferment. In
order to store the sugars in a usable and efficient state, bees convert the
nectar into honey.
Honey contains only 14-18% water.
Pound for pound, honey provides a much greater energy source than pure nectar.
The actual process of transforming
the flower nectar into honey requires teamwork. Older workers do the foraging
and bring the nectar back to the hive. There, younger hive bees complete the
task of turning it into honey.
First, worker bees fly out from the hive in search of nectar-rich flowers. Using its straw-like
proboscis, a worker bees drinks the liquid nectar and stores it in a special
stomach called the honey stomach. The bee continues to forage, visiting
hundreds of flowers, until its honey stomach is full.
Within the honey stomach, enzymes
break down the complex sugars of the nectar into simpler sugars, which are less
prone to crystallization. This process is called inversion.
With a full belly, the worker bee
heads back to the hive and regurgitates the already modified nectar for a hive
bee. The hive bee ingests the sugary offering and further breaks down the
sugars. It then regurgitates the inverted nectar into a cell of the honeycomb.
Now, the hive bees beat their wings
furiously, fanning the nectar to evaporate its remaining water content. As the
water evaporates, the sugars thicken into honey. Once the honey is finished,
the hive bee caps the beeswax cell, sealing the honey into the honeycomb for later
consumption.
A single worker bee produces only
1/12th of a teaspoon of honey in its lifetime.
Working cooperatively, thousands of
worker bees can produce over 200 pounds of honey for the colony within a year.
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