No, bees and wasps do not shed their exoskeleton. When they emerge from the pupal cell they are the full adult size and do not grow any more.
Most insects fall into that category: they have a head, thorax and abdomen.
Bees are typically rounder and harrier than wasps, with a more robust body shape. Bees also have flat and wide hind legs for collecting pollen. Wasps, on the other hand, have a slender body with a narrow waist and smooth, shiny skin. Additionally, wasps have longer and more distinct wings compared to bees.
yes bees have legs
they help wasps land, walk and protect themselves from predators!!
Wasps move by flying using their wings. They are agile flyers, capable of hovering in place, darting quickly, and flying with precision to locate food sources or travel back to their nest. On the ground, wasps crawl using their six legs.
Whereas that all wasps belong to the class Insects, the red wasps have six legs
6 (All insects have six legs.)
Bumble bees, like all other insects, have six legs.
Wasps have long legs to help them catch and hold onto their prey, as well as to navigate through their environment more effectively.
Bees have 6 legs.
No, they are probably Bumble Bees or they could be wasps. Digger bees (ground bees) will be different than honey bees...honey bees will be a colony consisting of one nest with thousands of bees...digger bees, may be a colony of dozens to hundreds, but it will be 1 nest to a bee, just many nests in the same area..do note, in arid areas honey bees are known to nest in the ground in old rodent burrows, but once again there will be many bees using the one nest Lar
Bumble bees, like all other insects, have six legs.