This is exactly true. Many people that have a kind word for you will eventually use those words against you, so you have to be careful in life.
Yes! Actually, you can even put honey on a bee sting to reduce the pain.
Most stings are by honey bees and other types of bee tend not to sting although they are able to.
yesAccording to Wikipedia, worker honey bees die after stinging a mammal once, due to its barbed stinger which becomes lodged in the 'victim's flesh, torn from the body of the honey bee. However the barbed stinger of the honey bee can safely withdraw after stinging another bee, thus leaving the honey bee alive to protect its hive again.All others are capable of multiple stings, including yellow jackets, which have slightly barbed stings, and honey bee queens, which are not barbed at all.
Of all the stinging hymenoptera (honey bees, bumble bees, wasps, ants and so on) only the honey bee worker has a barbed sting which it loses. All others (including the honey bee queen) keep their stings.
Honey bee workers are the only ones that have barbed stings. If they are unable to withdraw the sting after stinging they will leave it behind. This causes severe internal injuries and the bee will die from those injuries. All other bees have smooth stings and have no difficulty withdrawing them. An additional point is that it is only the females that sting, not the males. The sting is a modified ovipositor (egg laying tube), an organ that males do not have.
No, allergy to bee stings does not mean that there is also an allergy to honey. The two allergens are not related.
I think honey bees
Honey bees are not usually regarded as harmful, but of course they can sting, and some people are allergic to the stings, which on fairly rare occasions, can be fatal.
Anything from mild irritation to death but that is very rare. It depends on the person - different people have different reactions.
Yes! Actually, you can even put honey on a bee sting to reduce the pain.
Honey badgers do get stung, but they have a coarse coat and a tough skin which bees find difficult to penetrate with their stings.
honey and bees wax And lots of stings maybe even pollen
1000 bee stings
The only stinging insect that loses it stinger when it stings is the honey bee worker. So, no, the hornet does not lose its stinger.
African honey bees, like all other honey bees, have barbed stings and if they lose them they will die.
No, a wasp doesn't die if it stings but a honey bee does.
To reduce the number of stings they receive.