you need to shut up shity people
its stinger
Yes, honey bees have venom. When a honey bee stings, it injects venom into its victim which can cause pain, swelling, and allergic reactions in some individuals. Honey bee venom is used as a defense mechanism to protect the hive from threats.
A worker bee carries a stinger in her abdomen, which is a modified ovipositor. This stinger is used as a defense mechanism to protect the hive from threats and intruders. When a worker bee stings, it injects venom into the target, which can cause pain and deter predators. However, stinging is often fatal for the bee, as the stinger and associated tissues are left behind, leading to its death shortly after.
the honey bee
What is a defense mechanism
a normal honey bee a bee
The Africanized honey bee. Euorpean honey bees were breed with African honey bees, creating a hybrid bee known as the Africanized honey bee, or killer bee.
A bee will develop its stinger for either predation or defense. Unlike bumble bees honey bees can only use their stinger one time.
I hope that that bee is not an Africanized honey bee.
Honey bee IS the common name of the honey bee. The scientific name of the western honey bee is Apis Mellifera.
In theory, honey bees will sting anything that poses a threat to either a specific honey bee, or to the hive, including other insects, mammals, farm equipment, birds, clothing, etc. Stinging is their primary mode of defense. I have not heard of a specific case where a honey bee has stung a wood bee (or carpenter bee), but if a perceived threat from a carpenter bee was registered with one or more honey bees, or the hive, I have every reason to believe that honey bees would sting a carpenter bee. Incidentally, the opposite is also true, a carpenter bee could, in theory, sting a honey bee.
Dvorah (דבורה) = "honey bee"