yes
No. A honey bee queen can only sting other bees - not people.
No, the queen won't sting workers. The only thing a queen will directly attack is another queen.
A queen bee can sting, but she reserves her sting for other queens. As she generally never leaves the hive, the only persons who could be stung by a queen would be the beekeepers, but in all the years I have been beekeeping I have never heard of anyone being stung by a queen.
no. it will die. the sting on you will throb
There is no record of a famous person dying of a bee sting. However, around 100 people die every year as a result of allergic reactions to bee stings.
queen bees rarely sting, unless their hive is nowhere to help her. because if she does sting, the lower half of her body with fall off & she'll die, thus her hive will have no queen.
yes it hurts worse than a bee sting
In honeybees, only the males (drones) do not have a sting.
Queen bees have the same ability to sting as worker bees. The big difference is that the queen's sting is smooth, so she can withdraw it easily.Read more: Do_queen_bees_have_poison
No, male bees (drones) do not have a sting. Worker bees (all female) have a barbed sting which is left behind when the bee stings. The bee will then die. The queen bee has a smooth sting which she can withdraw, so she is able to sting more than once.
Yes, Queen honeybees have a smooth stinger, and can sting many times. However, a queen will rarely sting a person, for several reasons. 1) her job is not to defend the hive (the workers do that, and do it well, indeed.) and 2) her abdomen is so full of eggs, that she has difficulty curving it down to implant the sting. The primary use of her sting is to kill other, rival queens in the hive.
Some species of bee, such as the honey bee, will die after stinging a person as the stinger is barbed and is torn from their adomen in the process of stinging you. However not all species of bee have a barbed stinger and may be able to sting you repeatedly and live.