no
no
no
Yes.
Wasps are in the order Hymenoptera.This is the same order as ants, bees and sawflies.
Some people have a euphoric/mildly hallucinogenic reaction to bee sting(s). I dont recall hearing the same about wasps.
The creatures that are called yellow jackets in North America are called wasps in Europe -- so they are really the same. Hornets are a large variety of wasp. There are something like 75,000 different varieties of wasp known throughout the world with widely differing appearances and styles of life. Bees, though related to wasps, are a completely different species.
Sweat bees, which are a type of solitary bee, generally do not run off wasps. In fact, they tend to coexist in the same environments without significant conflict. While wasps can be more aggressive, sweat bees are usually non-aggressive and focus on foraging for nectar and pollen. If threatened, both species may defend themselves, but they typically maintain separate ecological roles.
The so-called 'killer bees', more properly called Africanized honey bees, are like any other honey bee and have exactly the same life-cycle. So, yes, they do lay eggs.
The term wasp is typically defined as any insect of the order Hymenoptera and suborder Apocrita that is neither a bee nor ant[1]. Almost every pest insect species has at least one wasp species that preys upon it or parasitizes it, making wasps critically important in natural control of their numbers, or natural biocontrol. Parasitic wasps are increasingly used in agricultural pest control as they prey mostly on pest insects and have little impact on crops.----Bees and wasps are cousins and are in the same order of classification: hymenoptera. Bees evolved from wasps some 100 million years ago, around the same time as plants started producing flowers, and bees and flowers have evolved together ever since.Wasps are carnivorous, and get their protein from other insects, insect larvae and caterpillers; whereas bees are herbivores, and get their protein by eating pollen.
yes all dogs are the same
No, they are probably Bumble Bees or they could be wasps. Digger bees (ground bees) will be different than honey bees...honey bees will be a colony consisting of one nest with thousands of bees...digger bees, may be a colony of dozens to hundreds, but it will be 1 nest to a bee, just many nests in the same area..do note, in arid areas honey bees are known to nest in the ground in old rodent burrows, but once again there will be many bees using the one nest Lar
dude its not
My answer is maybe has the same life cycle as a normal fish.
Automimicry is the advantage gained by some members of a species from their resemblance to others of the same species - such as various male species of bees and wasps which resemble more dangerous females.