yes.
Worker bees die after they sting because their stingers are barbed and get pulled out of their bodies. Their poison sacks, and part of their intestines are pulled out along with it killing the bee.
Only honey bee workers die after they sting, and then only if they lose their stinger. This is because the honey bee's sting is barbed. All other bees have smooth stings so have no problem pulling them out again so they don't die after they sting.Drones (male bees or wasps) don't have stingers.
Female bees, or worker bees, are the ones responsible for stinging because their stingers are modified egg-laying structures called ovipositors. When a worker bee stings, its stinger is barbed and gets stuck in the skin, tearing the bee's abdomen and causing it to die. This is why male bees, or drones, which do not have stingers, cannot sting.
The first time it stings you, its stinger comes off, usually stuck in your skin. A bee's sting has barbs at its tip, so that it cannot be pulled out as easily. When the bee frees itself from the sting, much of its organs are pulled out with it, and so the bee will soon die.
Bumble bees have stings, and will use them if provoked.
yes, worker bees sting, many people think that they don't but the queen bee does but they are the same type of bees
Queen bees have the same ability to sting as worker bees. The big difference is that the queen's sting is smooth, so she can withdraw it easily.
If you mean - do they have a venomous sting, then the answer is yes.
I don't know so please tell me
Yes, however, the stinger is actually a modified ovipositor. An ovipositor is the body part, or device a queen bee uses to lay eggs. She can also use it as a stinger. Worker bees can also sting, meaning worker bees are also female. Their stinger is an ovipositor. Most worker bees never lay eggs, but occasionally a worker can become a "laying worker." In most cases she has not been fertilized, and non-fertilized eggs become drones. Drones are male bees and, being male, they have no ovipositor and cannot sting.
Worker bees die after they sting because their stingers are barbed and get pulled out of their bodies. Their poison sacks, and part of their intestines are pulled out along with it killing the bee.
Queen bees have the same ability to sting as worker bees. The big difference is that the queen's sting is smooth, so she can withdraw it easily.Read more: Do_queen_bees_have_poison
Only honey bee workers die after they sting, and then only if they lose their stinger. This is because the honey bee's sting is barbed. All other bees have smooth stings so have no problem pulling them out again so they don't die after they sting.Drones (male bees or wasps) don't have stingers.
Female bees, or worker bees, are the ones responsible for stinging because their stingers are modified egg-laying structures called ovipositors. When a worker bee stings, its stinger is barbed and gets stuck in the skin, tearing the bee's abdomen and causing it to die. This is why male bees, or drones, which do not have stingers, cannot sting.
Female bees sting.
Bumble bees have stings, and will use them if provoked.
The first time it stings you, its stinger comes off, usually stuck in your skin. A bee's sting has barbs at its tip, so that it cannot be pulled out as easily. When the bee frees itself from the sting, much of its organs are pulled out with it, and so the bee will soon die.