No, they do die when stinging people, not like animals.
yes,because of body damage after stinging
No, a honey bee can only sting once because its stinger is barbed and gets stuck in the skin, causing the bee to die after stinging.
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.
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.
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.
because it was stinging funny!A joke that goes :Why did the bee cry?" should end with "cause he spilled the honey"
I couldn't find any other ones than honey making insect, stinging insect, bumblebee, drone, honey bee, killer bee, and queen bee. Hope these are sort helpful. You can go to http://thesaurus.reference.com for more synonyms for other words.
Yes, after stinging, a honeybee dies from a massive abdominal rupture. It does not easily separate itself from its stinger, which has two barbed lancets. As a honeybee pulls away from its stinger, parts of its digestive tracts, muscles, and nerves separate traumatically from its abdomen.Only honey bee's do.Only honeybees die when they sting. This is because of the shape of their stinger. Other bees such as bumble bees can sting multiple times.If you are stung by a honey bee, the bee will die. If you are stung by a wasp, it lives on to sting another day.
a bee stinging
Honey bees protect themselves by stinging intruders with their barbed stingers. When a honey bee stings, it releases venom that causes pain and inflammation. The bee usually dies after stinging because its stinger gets stuck in the skin of the target and is torn away from its body.
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.
the honey bee