No
yes they do by smelling and feeling
Yes it can do. There is a pheromone (perfume) present in the bee stinger that will attract other bees and cause them to attack.
in the bee stinger that will attract other bees and causes problem.
The Bees Are Attracted To The Flowers Scent And Smell.
If you feel as though when you kill one bee more will come, you are probably right. Bees release a pheromone that alerts other hive members of possible danger that is present. The other bees will move into attack mode when this happens.
it sends out a chemical to other bees which tells them to attack. I don't know what the chemical is called, its kind of complicated and im not a science expert.
No because he is a bee and he can't get stung from the other bees
They make sure the hive is clean. They also sweep out the dead bees.
Worker bees attract nursing bees by order of the queen bee it started when a philosopher named Daniel Dennett worked on a bee farm and found it out on September 10th when he was only 9 years of age
A bee does not sting itself, but a wasp sometimes will. Bees will sting other bees if they are fighting.
Bees communicate with each other with a little dance. A bee will tell other bees where to find flowers. Then the bees will follow the directions they were given.
i don't know but if you smash a wasp, it gives off a scent so other wasps can find out where the dead wasp is and attack you.if a wasp stings you, it gives off a scent too and other wasps will come and join the attacking party----Bee venom contains a pheromone (chemical messenger) called the 'attack pheromone'. The purpose of this is to attract other bees ready to sting and help repel the threat to the colony.If you squash a bee you will probably rupture the venom sac and release venom, with its pheromone. This may well attract the attention of a few bees, but not the whole hive because a bee's venom glands are not fully developed until it is about 17 or 18 days old, so younger bees would not come; and bees more than 21 days old are more likely to be away foraging during good weather, so you would probably only attract the hive's guard bees.
No. A decaying or decomposing dead bovine can produce flies, not bees. However, a dead carcass will attract bees as well because bees need some form of protein in their diet. A carcass will produce flies like to lay eggs on decomposing carcasses so that their larvae, maggots, eat at the carcass, which help them grow into pupae which then transform into adult flies. A beehive, which is where the queen bee lives, produces bees, not a decaying dead animal.