No, they are two separate systems.
No. A honey bee queen can only sting other bees - not people.
It can happen. They won't sting members of their own colony, but if bees from another colony try to enter the hive to steal the honey the guard bees will sting them. A newly-emerged queen will go around the hive looking for other queen cells. If she finds any she will sting through the cell walls to kill the developing queen inside them.
a queen conch is not known to sting
Queen and worker bumblebees can sting. Unlike a honey bee's stinger, a bumblebee's stinger doesn't have barbs, so they can sting more than once. Bumblebees are not normally aggressive, but they will sting in defence of their nest, or if they are harmed.
Ichneumonidae, otherwise known as parasitic wasps, are one of the larger insect families. The females have a large ovipositor (egg laying tube) which looks like a sting, but they do not sting. They may make 'stinging' movements if handled.In those Hymenoptera that do sting, (wasps, honey bees, bumble bees, etc) the sting is a modified ovipositor so it is only the females that can sting.
It can sting
Wasps,hornets, honey-bees, bumble bees, killer bees.Only the females (queen and workers) can sting, the males (drones) can't.
No, the queen won't sting workers. The only thing a queen will directly attack is another queen.
The honey bee has a venomous sting but produces honey for man.
sting people
They can sting.
According to the link, below, the major chemical in a honey bee sting is "melittin".