Can a red wasp leave one stinger in a number of places in the skin?
No. Bees have barbed stingers so when you get stung, it sticks in your skin. But wasps do not have barbed stingers, that is why they can sting repeatedly. When the wasps leaves your body, it takes its stinger with.
from personal experience yes but i dont think they always do
Wasps do not leave their stingers behind when they sting, unlike bees. Their stingers are smooth and can be used multiple times, allowing them to sting multiple times without losing their stinger. This adaptation helps them defend their nests and capture prey more effectively. In contrast, bees have barbed stingers that become lodged in their target, leading to their death after a single sting.
I Think That All Of Them Do Have Stingers
Scorpions, wasps, hornets and bees have stingers.
There are many varieties of wasps around the world. This makes it possible for different types of wasps to have different color stingers. The most common colors that are found for wasp stingers include black, brown, and red.
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.
No. This is only true of honeybees. Wasps do not lose their stingers and can sting multiple times.
No, only some Hymenoptera (bees, wasps, ants, and hornets) have stingers.
Yes. The sting in wasps and bees is a modified ovipositor, an organ that only females have.
When bees sting, their stingers get trapped inside the skin because there are barbs sticking out that snags the skin. The bee will try to get away soon after, and since the stinger and bee are going opposite ways it rips. This injury is fatal and the bee dies withing several minutes. Wasps do not die when they sting; they just fly away.
No, at the tip of their abdomen -- the other end of their bodies. At their mouth, they have mandibles or jaws.