no but it will generally hurt.
yes, worker bees sting, many people think that they don't but the queen bee does but they are the same type of bees
it depends they might if two different type of bees.
They are insects.
None. All bees have their sting at the tip of the abdomen -- the rear.
The females (queen and workers) of most varieties of bee can sting. No males (drones) of any species can sting because the sting is a modified ovipositor (egg laying tube) -- an organ that males do not have.There are a few varieties of bee that do not have stings at all. These are mostly solitary bees.
A bee doesn't have a predator because bees are animals that can sting so i don't think an animal would eat a bee unless they aren't smart.no...the bees still have predators even though they can still sting. Some of them are the Tracheal mites and the Varroa mites.Honey bees suffer predation from humans, bears, skunks, opossums, and a variety of insects and parasites. Other bees have other predators.
Weed killer can remain toxic in the environment for weeks to months, depending on the type of weed killer used and environmental conditions.
No, killer bees, which are a type of honey bee, are herbivores. They primarily feed on pollen and nectar from flowers to sustain themselves. They do not actively hunt or consume other animals for food.
yes they can because there are many different type of bees that have more or less poison
A sting from an African bee is no different from a sting from any other type of bee. The reputation of the so-called 'killer bees', better known as Africanized honey bees, has been sensationalized by the media because they are more defensive -- that is, they sting more readily -- and the victim tends to get stung by more than one bee. If a person is hypersensitive to bee venom it doesn't matter which species of bee stings, the result will be the same. If a person feels ill or dizzy after being stung or has difficulty breathing you should seek medical help.
Unmolested wasps, treated with respect, generally do not sting as stinging is purely a defence reaction. Apart from that, the biggest group of stingless wasps are the solitary wasps - hundreds, probably thousands of species.
Honey bee workers are the only ones that have barbed stings. If they are unable to withdraw the sting after stinging they will leave it behind. This causes severe internal injuries and the bee will die from those injuries. All other bees have smooth stings and have no difficulty withdrawing them. An additional point is that it is only the females that sting, not the males. The sting is a modified ovipositor (egg laying tube), an organ that males do not have.