To help them collect pollen.
only if 100 bees sting the victim but if the person heals it its fine
* adj. covered with a dense coat of fine silky hairs
They want to protect themselves. As long as you don't aggravate them or move around a lot while around them, you should be fine. Wasps are more irritable than bees.
When relating this quote to weather, it means that it will be a perfect sun shining day if the bees fly away from you. If they linger around you, it will be a gloomy rainy day.
Bees have five eyes. There are three simple eyes, called ocelli, in a triangle on the top of the head. These really only detect the difference between light and dark: they do not form an image. Bees also have two compound eyes each side of the head. These form a mosaic-like image. Bees do not see fine detail, but their eyes are very sensitive to movement. Their colour vision is also different from ours. It extends well into the ultra-violet part of the spectrum, but not so far into the red end of the spectrum. They are also sensitive to plane polarized light, which they use for navigation.
The honey bee has an exoskeleton that covers it entire body. This exoskeleton provides some degree of protection for the insect from other animals they prey on it.
root hairs are basically separated to each other...they are fine like hairs
HA
Vellus hair is fine peach fuzz found all over the body that is unpigmented, and does not stand up on its end (ie. goosebumps), whereas terminal hairs are thick, coarse and heavily pigmented. Terminals hairs have the capacity to stand up (goosebumps) and also contain sebaceous glands.
they were mmighty fine
root hairs are basically separated to each other.. they are fine like hairs..
nope
The protective structure of talahib is fine hairs
In week 9 the fetus begins to develop fingernails and body hair. By week 13 fine hairs begin to grow on the head.
Since butterflies are a type of insect, they do not have fur. They may however have hairs.
Body shape is different: a honey bee's body is similar to that of a wasp, while the bumble bee has a round body. The bumble bee is also known for it's hairy or fuzzy appearance. Honey bees, although having a fine hairs appear much smoother. Bumble bees are also usually black and yellow in colour, honey bees more shades of brown. Bumble bees are similar to honey bees in that a hive will consist of a queen, female worker bees, and male drones, who are responsible for mating with the queen. They do produce honey, but in very small amounts, so they are not used for commercial honey production. Another similarity is that only the females possess stingers. Bumble bees tend to live in fairly small nests, which are usually in the ground. For this reason, they do not swarm like honey bees. Bumble bees can thrive in colder climates than most honey bees because they can regulate their body temperature and they have furry bodies. With many bumble bee varieties, only the queen will survive over the winter, and she hibernates in her nest. Honey bees do not hibernate, and although the drones are evicted from the hive at the end of summer and die, the queen and workers over-winter in the hive, taking the opportunity to forage whenever the air temperature is high enough.
only if 100 bees sting the victim but if the person heals it its fine