Facts About Bumblebees

A rusty patched bumblebee collects pollen and nectar from a flower.
A rusty patched bumblebee collects pollen and nectar from a flower.
(Image credit: Dan Mullen, via Flickr, Creative Commons license)

Bumblebees are large, fuzzy insects with short, stubby wings. They are larger than honeybees, but they don't produce as much honey. However, they are very important pollinators. Without them, food wouldn't grow.

Two-thirds of the world's crop species depend on animals to transfer pollen between male and female flower parts, according to ecologist Rachel Winfree, an assistant professor in the department of entomology at Rutgers University. Many animals are pollinators — including birds, bats and butterflies — but "there's no question that bees are the most important in most ecosystems," she said in a 2009 article in National Wildlife magazine. 

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