A bees adaptation: wings to fly which helps them get away from predators, a stinger for protection and for attacking, special fur that can pick up nectar to make honey to feed them, and antenni to communicate
bees' adaptations are that they female bumble bees have a barbed stinger if in danger and fur to gather more pollen
Bees' adaptations are important for their survival and reproduction in their specific habitats. These adaptations help bees efficiently collect nectar and pollen for food, build and maintain their hives, communicate with each other, and defend themselves from predators. Without these adaptations, bees would struggle to thrive in their environments.
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Bees working together is a behavioral adaptation. All of the other adaptations mentioned are physical adaptations.
Bees have developed stingers to protect them from harm and fur in order to successfully gather pollen. They have developed these adaptations in order to survive longer.
Adaptations are due to mutations in the genetic code. Nothing conciously adapts to the environment.
The stingers of bees and wasps are evolved from the queen's ovipositor, the part of her body that lays eggs. All workers (and the only ones that can sting) are female.
Yes, They release a good scent to attract bees,wasps or flies.
The structure of the iris is designed to make bees brush pollen so that the flower is fertilized.
Bee flight adaptations Muscles for flying short choppy wing strokes wings rotate like a helicopter Bee flight adaptations Muscles for flying short choppy wing strokes wings rotate like a helicopter
'Killer bees' is really the wrong name, they should really be called Africanized bees because they are the result of a cross between some African queens and western honey bee drones. They are not killers, the sting of an Africanized bee is no worse than the sting of a western bee. The problem with them is they tend to be less docile and more prone to sting, hence their reputation. As far as adaptations are concerned, Africanized bees are very little different from western bees. They are the same size and colouring. There is a slight difference in the veins in the wing, but looking at one bee is not enough to tell, you have to take measurements of a large number of bees and statistically analyse the results to see a difference. The only definitive way of distinguishing is by DNA analysis.
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