Yes. Their stinger falls out, and they die shortly after. It's their last line of defense.
If a bee were to sting an ant, the ant would certainly die. But a bee would usually have no reason to sting an ant.
They make great honey and without them there will be no flowers. When they sting their abdomen is torn with the sting so when they sting something they die. Without bees pollination would not happen and the human race would be wiped out.
no. it will die. the sting on you will throb
yes it is true because once i got bee sting-ed and i am still alive
The sting of an Africanized honey bee (proper name for what Hollywood and the sensationalist media call the 'killer bee') is no worse than the sting of any other variety of bee. Most people will just have a short period of pain from the sting, but there is a very small minority of people who are hypersensitive to bee venom, and for these people one sting can be dangerous -- even life-threatening. And the variety of bee makes no difference.
No, a honey bee can only sting once because its stinger is barbed and gets stuck in the skin, causing the bee to die after stinging.
sting
you would die. but slowly
He died from a bee sting in the summer .
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.
A honey bee queens has a sting that is smooth like a hypodermic needle so it can be removed after stinging. A honey bee worker s has a sting that is barbed like a fishing hook so it stays embedded after stinging. However, you do not need to worry about being stung by a queen bee since they only use them against other queens.
If you are allergic to bee stings, it most certainly could kill you.