It is how they protect themselves from predators. It is their one and only weapon for survival.
A sac that holds venom.
No.
Yes, honey bees have venom. When a honey bee stings, it injects venom into its victim which can cause pain, swelling, and allergic reactions in some individuals. Honey bee venom is used as a defense mechanism to protect the hive from threats.
Through a barb at the rear of their abdomen.
It depends on how you kill the bees. If the bee is killed by being crushed it is quite possible that the venom sac is ruptured and the venom will leak out. One component of the venom produces a scent called the alarm pheromone and this could attract other bees which would be ready to sting.
Bees venom isn't very deadly. It's the venom that attract other bees to sting you. All the stingers injected in your body kills you, not the venom.
A sac that holds venom.
No.
No, they are not bees. They have venom glands and reproduce venom with energy and time.
the stinger has venom
Yes, honey bees have venom. When a honey bee stings, it injects venom into its victim which can cause pain, swelling, and allergic reactions in some individuals. Honey bee venom is used as a defense mechanism to protect the hive from threats.
nothing
When bees sting you, they insert a barb into your skin and then send a venom down the barb and into your body.
No, bee venom is a weak acid.
Through a barb at the rear of their abdomen.
deadly venom
Killer bee venom is actually less potent than honey bee. The only problem is that honey bees will keep poking you repeatedly and not get much venom in your system, where killer bees poke you with the stinger and extract all of the venom. Another thing about bees is that they will attack in swarms, they will follow you for up to two miles and just latch on. It really depends on how much venom the bee is able to put in your system, and how many you are stung by. http://www.beeremovalspecialist.com/bees/bee-identification.html