No, Spiders do not have stingers like some insects do. Instead, they possess fangs that they use to inject venom into their prey. While some spider species can deliver painful bites or have venom that can be harmful to humans, they do not have a stinger for defense or attack. Their primary means of subduing prey is through venomous bites.
Spiders- They have fangs, and stingers but them do not have antenna
Some insects like ants, beetles, centipedes, and parasitoid wasps are known to hunt and eat spiders. They use various techniques such as overwhelming the spider in numbers, using venomous stingers, or physically overpowering them to capture and consume spiders as a food source.
Some ants can have stingers. However, most ants simply bite, and some are also completely harmless. Fire ants and harvester ants are two of the most common ants that have stingers, and are primarily seen outdoors.
Well, Spiders tend to eat anything that gets caught in their web, but obviously they would take care to not eat the stingers. To spiders, anything that lands in their web is classed as 'food'.
No, only some Hymenoptera (bees, wasps, ants, and hornets) have stingers.
no some insects do not eat spiders
All jellyfish have stingers. I once wondered the same question. For example, a moon jellyfish doesn't look like it has stingers. It does, it's just that they're small and kind of tucked into the body.
Yes. Bumblebees have stingers.
No, boy bees do not have stingers. Stingers are only present in female bees.
Nope. Some spiders have eyes that are bigger than some small spiders themselves.
Both some birds and most spiders eat insects and spiders.
Stingers was created on 1998-09-29.