Bombus pennsylvanicus
There isn't one. Killer bees are more properly called Africanized honey bees and are the result of a cross between 26 Tanzanian honey bees (apis mellifera scutellata) which escaped from a research station in Brazil, and local Western honey bees drones (apis mellifera mellifera).
No. Honey bees (Apis Meliferra) are a different species.
Africanized honey bees, which were given the name 'killer bees' by the sensationalist media, are just a particular breed of honey bee (a cross between the Tanzanian honey bee, Apis mellifera scutellata, and the Western honey bee, Apis mellifera mellifera. As such, they are the same size and have the same appearance as the Western honey bee, and have the same lifespan. Queens live for three to five years; workers can live for up to six months over the winter, but will only live for about six weeks in the summer; and drones can live for about four months, but die during the act of mating with a new queen, and will be evicted from the hive by the workers at the end of summer, and will die of cold or starvation.
Taxonomy of the honey bee: * Kingdom: Metazoa * Phylum: Arthropoda * Class: Insecta * Order: Hymenoptera * Family: Apidae * Genus: Apis * Species: Apis mellifera
Africanized (killer) bees are very aggreseive. But for the most part, in the common bee, no they are not aggresive. They only sting to protect the hive or nest, or when they are frightened. If you stay clear of them, they will do the same.
European Honey-Bee, Apis melliferaKingdom: AnimaliaPhylum: ArthropodaClass: InsectaOrder: HymenopteraSuborder: ApocritaSuperfamily: ApoideaFamily: ApidaeGenus: ApisSpecies: melliferaThe above classification is for the European honey bee, or bumble bee. Other bees have different Genus and Species name, for example the stingless native bee (Australia) is called Trigona carbonaria . Note the genus and species are always italicised, the genus has a capital letter, the species does not.Also in the same Order -Hymenoptera, are ants and wasps. Most ants only have wings during their mating flights.
a killer bee is very deadly and a honey bee can sting you and it will hurt but it wont be as deadly----The above is a common misconception. 'Killer bee' is a name given to the Africanized honey bee by Hollywood and the sensationalist media. The Africanized honey bee is the result of a cross between some Tanzanian honey bee queens which escaped from a research laboratory in northern Brazil in the 1950s. They mated with local European honey bee drones and produced wild (feral) colonies which slowly spread southwards to the limits of tropical South America and northwards through Central America to the southernmost states of the USA. There are none anywhere else in the world, and they are not likely to spread too much further because they don't tolerate cold weather.Africanized bees and European bees are the same size, look the same and generally behave the same. The only way to definitively tell them apart is by DNA analysis. The sting of an individual Africanized bee is no worse than the sting of a European bee. Their reputation comes from the fact they are more defensive of their hive so are far more ready to sting and tend to sting in larger numbers. It is the number of stings that make them more dangerous.
No. Windows and Linux have different APIs and ABIs for programs to access. You cannot run Linux binaries on Windows, and you can only run Windows binaries on Linux if you have Wine installed.
The duration of Same Same but Different is 1.77 hours.
Same Same but Different was created on 2009-08-13.
Bacteria, birds, fungi, mammals, and mites eat Africanized honey bees (Apis mellifera scutellata). The insects in question face the same larger natural enemies -- anteaters, armadillos, badgers, bears, bee wolves, honey badgers, safari ants, sloths, wasps -- as other bees even though their aggressiveness and super-powerful detection of presences within 50 feet (0.016 kilometers) of the nest makes them more successfully offensive and self-defensive. They even handle predation by trachea and varroa mites in more resistant ways than their peers.