And Honey - Flowers

At its core, the connection is a sophisticated trade. Flowers require pollination to reproduce, but because they are rooted in place, they must outsource the transport of their genetic material. To attract a courier, they produce nectar—a high-energy sugar solution.

The significance of this relationship extends far beyond the pantry. Roughly one-third of the food humans consume depends on animal pollination, with bees and flowers doing the bulk of the work. Without the incentive of nectar, many flowering plants would vanish; without the flowers, the honeybee would starve. Flowers and Honey

Honey is not simply "concentrated nectar." It is the product of a complex chemical transformation. Once a bee returns to the hive, the nectar is passed from bee to bee, a process that exposes the liquid to enzymes like invertase. These enzymes break down complex sugars into simple ones (glucose and fructose) and produce small amounts of hydrogen peroxide, which gives honey its natural antibacterial properties. At its core, the connection is a sophisticated trade