Honeybees have a unique defense mechanism where their barbed stinger becomes lodged in the skin and tears free from the bee's body, causing the bee's death; however, the venom sac remains attached and continues pumping venom into the wound even after the bee is gone, making this a one-time sacrifice that prioritizes colony survival over individual bee survival.
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Why Bees Die After One Sting 😳Added:
You think a bee can sting again? But it can't. When a honeybee stings, its barb locks into your skin like a tiny hook.
It won't come back out. Most insects can sting repeatedly, but honeybees are different. Their stinger is designed to stay behind. As the bee pulls away, the stinger tears free from its body, and something keeps going. The venom sac, [music] still attached, continues to pump, driving more venom into the wound even after the bee is gone. That single sting isn't just an attack, it's a sacrifice, a defense system built to protect the hive at any cost.
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