I think so yes
Ants, bees, wasps, flies, butterflies, beetles, dragonflies, ... (That's more than five.)
yes they can eat flies, bees, and butterflies.
Birds have bones; butterflies don't have bones. Butterflies have an exoskeleton; birds have an endoskeleton. Birds have feathers; butterflies have scales. Birds have two wings; Butterflies have four. Birds have two legs; butterflies have six. Birds have beaks; butterflies have antennae.
Sweetheart, butterflies don't mate with people.
more than half
There are more than 120,000 species of butterflies in the world. There are more than 10,000 species of butterflies in North America. Out of these butterflies species in North America there are 17 different species which are threatened by extinction. No known species has officially become extinct in the North American region.
Three legs are more stable than 4 legs.
more than 2000!
Dragonflies generally capture insects on-the-fly. You may see dragonflies flying or waiting on a branch or cattail. When an unsuspecting insect comes flying along, they either launch toward the pray, or swoop in from above. This happens very fast. Dragonflies capture an insect by forming a sort of net with its legs. As they approach, they net the insect by coming in faster than the insect is flying, they fly very slightly higher than the insect, thus allowing the insect to slip into the net formed by its legs. They then eat the insect alive. Now, I do not know for sure if dragonflies actually pursue bees specifically, but if they do, this is the method used.
It is not an insect. It has more than 6 legs.
I take it your meant 4 legs no there are not
Yes they have 750 legs