You are correct, it is called a stinger.[1]
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Actually, stinger is the colloquial term. It is more properly called a sting. (See the related link)
A bee's sting is at the tip of its abdomen.
a bee stinger is small and thin and it is also pointy. if a bee stings you then the stinger gets stuck in you and you will have to pull it out and after the bee stings you it dies.
A bee's stinger is in the tip of its abdomen.
Yes. Fairly large, single use.
an ovipositor
No. After a bee has stung its victim, when it pulls away the barbed stinger pulls out of the bee's body together with with the venom sac and the associated structures. The bee dies from its injuries.
The barb that is on a bee's stinger is like a razor blade. This will cause the stinger to remain locked into the skin when projected.
No.
Well, the difference is that the worker bees (female) and the queen bee have stingers, as the drones (male) do not. So, if a bee has a stinger, it is a female, and if it doesn't have a stinger, it is a male. Hope I helped! :)
there is no bee, wasp, hornet, and honey bee that has a triangle stinger. (they all have cone stingers).
Here are some Words and Phrases that go with bee theme:Buzz / BuzzingPollen / PollinateFlowersHoneyHiveBusy as beesSting / Stinger
Getting a bee stinger out is not easy. The best way to get out a bee stinger would be with a pair of tweezers.
You don't. Unlike a honey bee, a wasp withdraws its stinger after stinging and a honey bee leaves its stinger stuck in your skin.
It has a stinger to jab at it's enemies. The problem with the stinger, is that if the bee stabs someone with it, the stinger attaches itself to the enemy and is torn from the bee's backside, which results in the death of the bee.
No.
No. After a bee has stung its victim, when it pulls away the barbed stinger pulls out of the bee's body together with with the venom sac and the associated structures. The bee dies from its injuries.
The stinger on his butt
Yes!
a stinger
Get the stinger out
No wasp or bee has a stinger on its head.
The stinger is at the tip of the abdomen (rear end of the bee).