Yes, like all insects bees have an exoskeleton.
A Bee is an Invertebrate.A bee had an exoskeleton so it is an invertebrate.
A Bee is an Invertebrate.A bee had an exoskeleton so it is an invertebrate.
The honey bee has an exoskeleton that covers it entire body. This exoskeleton provides some degree of protection for the insect from other animals they prey on it.
The body covering on a bee is often referred to as an exoskeleton. They are also covered with plumose.
A bee is an insect. The type of invertebrate it is is an arthropod.
The honey bee has an exoskeleton that covers it entire body. This exoskeleton provides some degree of protection for the insect from other animals they prey on it.
Bees, like all other insects, do not have a bony skeleton. A bee's outer casing is its exoskeleton, and it is composed mainly of substance called chitin, a hard, horn-like material.
bee cow exoskeleton bone skeletons large/small intestine only small intestine insect flies lays eggs lives in hive around 1.3cm sting
No, bees, like all insects are invertebrates, which means they don't have a bony skeleton.
Bees have neither bones nor a spine.Like all insects bees have an exoskeleton: a hard shell surrounding their body made mostly of the carbohydrate polymer chitin.
The smallest calcerous skeleton is likely from diatoms...the smallest vertibrate skeleton is from the bumble-bee bat. Exoskeleton the fairyfly.
they have exoskeleton