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  2. Stinger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stinger

    Stings are usually located at the rear of the animal. Animals with stings include bees, wasps (including hornets), some ants like fire ants, and scorpions, [2] [3] as well as a single beetle species (Onychocerus albitarsis) that can deliver a venomous sting from its antennae, whose terminal segments have evolved to resemble a scorpion's tail. [4]

  3. Cerceris fumipennis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cerceris_fumipennis

    Once prey has been found, a female wasp will typically attack a target beetle by alighting on it, climbing over it, and grabbing it by the thorax with her mandibles before inserting her stinger into the base of the beetle's leg (in the membrane of the coxal joint, a gap in the buprestid's armour) and injecting a paralytic venom.

  4. Polistes carolina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polistes_carolina

    Typically, paper wasps are relatively unaggressive, only attacking humans and animals if they or their nests are being threatened. As in other aculeate wasps, only females have the ability to sting. [16] Unlike bees, wasps do not have barbed stingers that can be lost, so they are able to sting multiple times to defend a nest. [17]

  5. 11 common bug bites — and photos to help you identify them

    www.aol.com/news/11-common-bug-bites-photos...

    These photos of 11 common bug bites and stings can help you identify what's responsible. Plus, symptoms and expert tips to help identify and treat insect bites. ... bedbugs leave bites on the arms ...

  6. It’s a ‘big year for wasps’ in California. Here’s why and how ...

    www.aol.com/news/big-wasps-california-why-avoid...

    Wasps, which are typically about the size of a paper clip, can be identified by their pointed lower abdomens and narrow midsections, according to National Geographic.

  7. Bee sting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bee_sting

    Drone bees, the males, are larger and do not have stingers. The female bees (worker bees and queens) are the only ones that can sting, and their stinger is a modified ovipositor. The queen bee has a barbed but smoother stinger and can, if need be, sting skin-bearing creatures multiple times, but the queen does not leave the hive under normal ...

  8. Yellowjacket - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yellowjacket

    Yellowjackets have lance-like stingers with small barbs, and typically sting repeatedly, [1] though occasionally a stinger becomes lodged and pulls free of the wasp's body; the venom, like most bee and wasp venoms, is primarily dangerous to only those humans who are allergic or are stung many times. All species have yellow or white on their faces.

  9. Hornet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hornet

    Hornet stings are more painful to humans than typical wasp stings because hornet venom contains a large amount (5%) of acetylcholine. [ 8 ] [ 9 ] Individual hornets can sting repeatedly. Unlike honey bees , hornets do not die after stinging because their stingers are very finely barbed (only visible under high magnification) and can easily be ...