How do Bees make honey?

Honeybees suck nectar from a wide variety of flowers. But each bee usually keeps to a particular kind of flower until its supply diminishes. The nectar is collected by the forager bee in an organ called the honey sac. Here the nectar is broken down to two sugars, fructose and dextrose, by the action of a special enzyme. On returning to the hive the bee empties the nectar load by disgorging it onto the mouth parts of the younger bees. They evaporate some of the water and concentrate the nectar. Glandular secretions further transform it. After this, the nectar is deposited in an empty storage cell in the honeycomb, where the nectar gradually thickens into honey by evaporation. To speed up evaporation bees in the hive fan their wings (26,400 times a minute) to set up additional air currents. After the cells are filled with honey these are sealed with wax by the bees.