Treatment for a wasp sting will depend on how severe the condition. If there is an allergic reaction to the sting, then medical attention is needed. An antihistamine or allergy kit can be treatments.
Well, wasp sting is more poisonous than bee sting
A wasp sting and a bee sting have different properties and therefore need different treatments to neutralize the sting.
the wasp sting is full of venom which is alkaline
blue
If the sting is from a wasp, the stinger will not be left behind. A wasp's stinger is firmly attached to its body and is smooth so it can easily be withdrawn. A honey bee's sting is barbed, and is less firmly attached to its body, so when a bee stings then pulls away the sting can be left behind. It will be seen as a small (about 2mm) pale-coloured mass at the site of the sting. This should be scraped out as quickly as possible because it can continue to inject venom for up to two minutes after the bee has gone.
The nature of the bee and wasp sting is that they are usually inflammatory and acidic.
Well, wasp sting is more poisonous than bee sting
A bee or wasp might STING.
sting
yes it does like a bee sting
It doesn't.
The self-defensive sinking of a stinger, with the resulting death of the bee, not the wasp, into skin defines a bee or a wasp sting.
A bee does not sting itself, but a wasp sometimes will. Bees will sting other bees if they are fighting.
No
A wasp's sting. The wasp sting is worse because their stinger is smooth making them able to pull it out smoothly and shove it in again. A bee's stinger is barbed like a fishing hook so they can't pull it out.
The stinger is on the back end of the bee, wasp, or hornet.
A wasp sting and a bee sting have different properties and therefore need different treatments to neutralize the sting.