yes,because of body damage after stinging
No, a wasp doesn't die if it stings but a honey bee does.
YES the bee stings
Yes.
yesAccording to Wikipedia, worker honey bees die after stinging a mammal once, due to its barbed stinger which becomes lodged in the 'victim's flesh, torn from the body of the honey bee. However the barbed stinger of the honey bee can safely withdraw after stinging another bee, thus leaving the honey bee alive to protect its hive again.All others are capable of multiple stings, including yellow jackets, which have slightly barbed stings, and honey bee queens, which are not barbed at all.
no. it will die. the sting on you will throb
Only honey bee workers die after stinging because they lose their barbed sting in the victim. Honey bee queens and all bumble bees have smooth stings and can withdraw them and will survive.
Honey bee jaws are designed for gathering food and are too weak to hurt a human - so nothing would happen if a honey bee were to try and bite a human. To protect themselves honey bees have a 'sting'.
No, they do die when stinging people, not like animals.
Yes, a bee does die, where as a wasp doesn't.
Honey bee workers are the only ones that have barbed stings. If they are unable to withdraw the sting after stinging they will leave it behind. This causes severe internal injuries and the bee will die from those injuries. All other bees have smooth stings and have no difficulty withdrawing them. An additional point is that it is only the females that sting, not the males. The sting is a modified ovipositor (egg laying tube), an organ that males do not have.
yes ,they do if they are not given the antidote in time.
It Takes A Couple Of Hours.