You feel pain, itching and annoyance when bees stings. That's because the bees jabs its barbed stinger into your skin and release some venom, which contains proteins that cause pain and can affect your immune system and skin cells.
Figure 1: Bee stings apparatus, credits: frontiers |
But it's nothing compared to what the poor tiny bee has to go through. You'll be fine after a few hours, but the bee won'tšµš®. Honey bees don't strike people unless they feel threatened or if you step on them mistakenly. The real issue is that the bee can't get its barb stinger out of your skin after stinging you. The only way to break free is to leave the stinger. The stinger is not only a good defense mechanism, but it also contains parts of the bee's digestive tract, nerves, and muscles, which are all necessary for the bee to function properly. So, after losing everything, this tiny creature perishes.
Figure 2: Left over after stings, credits: researchgate.net |
Lastly, when a honeybee stings a mammal, its barbed stinger lodges in the skin, making it impossible for the honeybee to extract. It instead abandons the double lancet, as well as a portion of its digestive tract, muscles, and nerves. The bee dies as a result of the abdominal rupture.
Click here
Comments
Post a Comment