Some people use a little bit of un-used tobacco. Either out of a cigarette or dip, it's suppose to help elevate the pain.
Bumble bees have stings, and will use them if provoked.
A bee will develop its stinger for either predation or defense. Unlike bumble bees honey bees can only use their stinger one time.
actually not really. They make their nests in pretty random places like mailboxes, sometimes. Their stings are best treated with meat tenderizer on a wet cloth pressed against the sting. they do not swarm you unless you step on their nest by accident. they usually just sting you and you can get help. if ur alone when you get stung it would be best to use mud to blot the sting. and just in case its not rainy, you can use a leaf.
Bees use nectar from flowers to produce honey, the honey badger then feed on the honey that the bees produce.
Only honey bee workers die after they sting, and then only if they lose their stinger. This is because the honey bee's sting is barbed. All other bees have smooth stings so have no problem pulling them out again so they don't die after they sting.Drones (male bees or wasps) don't have stingers.
The Bees keep balance honey to use when non seson time.
== == Africanized or Killer bees are different that domesticated or European bees in that they produce greater quantities of honey that is sweeter, and they are much more aggressive for less reason and they produce more and stronger sting venom. Where European bees will defend their hive if intruded upon (the reason beekeepers use smudge pots to anesthetize the bees), Africanized bees will actually pursue intruders and continue to sting him even after he has died, and they may interpret an intruder as no more than a passerby.
They die
Yes, however, the stinger is actually a modified ovipositor. An ovipositor is the body part, or device a queen bee uses to lay eggs. She can also use it as a stinger. Worker bees can also sting, meaning worker bees are also female. Their stinger is an ovipositor. Most worker bees never lay eggs, but occasionally a worker can become a "laying worker." In most cases she has not been fertilized, and non-fertilized eggs become drones. Drones are male bees and, being male, they have no ovipositor and cannot sting.
Bees make beeswax and use it to form chambers where they store honey. There are no actual bee parts or honey in beeswax.
A worker honey bee's sting is barbed, so after she has thrust it into the victim she cannot pull it back out. When the bee pulls away, the sting remains behind, together with the venom sac and often part of the intestine. The resulting damage is fatal to the bee. A queen bee has a smooth sting so she can withdraw the sting and re-use it. Drones (male bees) don't have a sting.
If the bees are kept in a hive, they build their comb onto frames and fill the comb with honey. An extractor is used to get the honey out of the comb. An extractor spins the frames and forces the honey out of the comb and against the walls of the extractor. It can then be filtered and eaten. They also use harmless smoke on the bees so they stay out of the way and don't sting the beekeepers.