A bee or wasp is likely to engage in foraging behavior, seeking out nectar, pollen, or other food sources to bring back to their colony. They may also engage in pollination, transferring pollen from one flower to another as they feed. Additionally, bees and wasps may exhibit defensive behaviors if they perceive a threat, such as stinging in defense of their nest or territory.
Well, wasp sting is more poisonous than bee sting
there is no bee, wasp, hornet, and honey bee that has a triangle stinger. (they all have cone stingers).
A male bee is a drone, and it doesn't have a sting. All other bees are female, and they do have stings.
A wasp sting and a bee sting have different properties and therefore need different treatments to neutralize the sting.
Yep they do it stings a little but not like a bee or wasp.
A bee or wasp might STING.
sting
sting
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.
wasp as to nest
sting
The nature of the bee and wasp sting is that they are usually inflammatory and acidic.
the wasp....?
Eccentricities of the Wasp and Bee - 1922 was released on: USA: 5 February 1922
No wasp or bee has a stinger on its head.
The stinger is on the back end of the bee, wasp, or hornet.
A brown bee is a hornet or wasp that is the color brown>