no, if their stinger breaks off after stinging someone then it ill grow back at rate of about 5.75 inches per month.
Yes, stingrays can lose their stingers, which are actually modified barbs made of cartilage. If a stingray gets injured or if the stinger is damaged, it can detach. However, stingrays can regenerate their stingers over time, similar to how some other animals can regrow lost body parts.
stingrays do not bite they have a stinger in the tale
Using a stinger
of course not
Yes. If a stingrays stinger touches you, the sharp ends can break off and cut into your skin
They have a stinger at the end of their tail.
The only stinging insect that loses it stinger when it stings is the honey bee worker. So, no, the hornet does not lose its stinger.
Its the tail. The tail has 'electricity' to shock the prey. Thus, protecting it.
Some of their guts come out when the stinger is ejected so they lose blood and organs.
The barb that is on a bee's stinger is like a razor blade. This will cause the stinger to remain locked into the skin when projected.
Their stinger is attached to their guts so that when they sting a person, they lose they're guts as well... Not the best answer but hey...
No. European honeybees permenantly lose their stinger after stinging a victim, and the bee dies. The Africanized honeybee (the "killer bee") does not lose its stinger and can sting multiple times.