bee making honey flying on flowers

File

License + info

Please Check the original Web

Date

2013-09-13

Source

Colors

View 2225 times seen 202 downloads
bee making honey flying on flowers.

This vector resource includes the following elements:

Flower,Flowers,Nature,Spring,Art,Bee,Clip art,Image,Svg,Public,Tulip,Domain,Externalsource,Public domain,Season

 


This vector contains the following main colors: White,Black,Classic Rose,Atlantis,Pale Canary

Tags

    Flower Flowers Nature Spring Art Bee Clip art Image Svg Public Tulip Domain Externalsource Public domain Season White Black Classic Rose Atlantis Pale Canary

Other files that may of interest to you
honey bee in side view
bee lady bending in side view
two bee cartoons flying on two flowers
beef beer manual set for product logo design
bumble bee in black and white
pattern with cute bee flowers continuous
bee in top view
yellow bear with hat eating honey with a spoon
bee with yellow face wings and cloth bending
bees and orange flowers pattern
honey wiki:
>For other uses, see Honey (disambiguation). Honey is a sweet and viscous fluid produced by bees and other insects from the nectar of flowers. "The definition of honey stipulates a pure product that does not allow for the addition of any other substance. This includes, but is not limited to, water or other sweeteners," according the United States National Honey Board 2003and other nations' food regulations. See more at Wikipedia.org...

bee wiki:
>For other uses, see Bee (disambiguation). Andrenidae Apidae Colletidae Halictidae Heterogynaidae Megachilidae Melittidae Oxaeidae Sphecidae Stenotritidae Bees (Apoidea superfamily) are flying insects, closely related to wasps and ants. They are adapted for feeding on nectar, and play an important role in pollinating flowering plants, and are called pollinators. Bees have a long proboscis that enables them to obtain the nectar from flowers. Bees have antennae made up of thirteen segments in males and twelve in females. They have two pairs of wings, the back pair being the smaller of the two. See more at Wikipedia.org...


Popular searches