A bee has one digestive stomach and a crop, sometimes called the honey stomach. The crop is where nectar is stored while it is being taken back to the hive and is not strictly a part of the digestive system as no digestion occurs in it.
in the bee stomach
A bee entering your mouth is far more likely to sting inside your mouth or your throat. By the time it reaches your stomach it probably will be dead, and it certainly wouldn't survive once it reached the highly acidic stomach juices.
It probably wasn't a bee because they are strictly vegetarian. It was probably a wasp.
a bumble bee (on her stomach)
The honey crop, or honey stomach, is a sac between the bee's oesophagus and its stomach. It is used for carrying nectar, water or honey. Nectar that is to be used for making honey does not go past the honey crop, so never actually enters the bee's digestive stomach.
A honey stomach of a bee is a specialized organ that allows bees to store nectar collected from flowers. This nectar is then transported back to the hive where it is converted into honey by enzymes produced in the bees' bodies. The honey stomach plays a crucial role in the honey-making process.
A saclike organ in a bee that stores nectar
The pollen basket of a honey bee is located on the tibia and first tarsal segment of their hind legs.
A bee doesn't have any hands
A bee has one heart.
bee is a noun not a verb
A bee has four wings.