No, like most insects, honey bees have a complete lifecycle (egg, larva, pupa, adult).
Only insects such as cockroaches have an incomplete metamorphosis (egg, several stages of nymph or 'instar' then adult, with no larval/pupal stages)
Yes.
Yellow jackets go through complete metamorphosis, which includes four distinct life stages: egg, larva, pupa, and adult. This process involves a complete transformation of the organism's body structure and behavior as it progresses through these stages.
No, yellow jackets do not eat through wood. They build there nests in the ground. However, Carpenter Bees make holes in certain types of wood.
Hornets and yellow jackets can compress their bodies to squeeze through holes as small as the width of a pencil.
Eggs, Larvae, Pupae, Ladybug 1. Small eggs hatch. 2. Larvae look like tiny black and yellow aligators. 3. Pupae formed when Larvae hang upside down and form a translucent yellowish casing that quickly goes black with faint red-orange areas. 4. Ladybugs emerge.
No ... the Frankford Yellow Jackets joined the NFL in 1924 and played through 1931. They won the NFL Championship in 1926.
yellow jackets are not bees, and they do nothing but pollinate
Frankford Yellow Jackets ended in 1931.
Frankford Yellow Jackets was created in 1899.
Pittsburgh Yellow Jackets was created in 1915.
No, yellow jackets cannot carry rattlesnake venom simply by feeding on a dead snake because venom must be injected into a victim through a bite or sting to be effective. Yellow jackets have their own venom that they use for defense and predation, which is not the same as rattlesnake venom.
Yellow jackets do not possess photographic memory.