Кого осы и пчелы жалят чаще всего?
Wasps and bees, bee stings, wasp stings, stings, alarm pheromones, beehives, wasp nests, and the truth about stinging insects—in this issue, we explore which is actually more dangerous and which insects they sting most often. Wasps and bees only seem similar at first glance. The bee is soft, fluffy, and associated with flowers, nectar, pollen, and the hive. The wasp is smooth, shiny, with a slender waist and the body of a predator. It hunts other insects, feeds its larvae meat, and can sting again and again. A bee, on the other hand, often pays for a single sting with its life, because its stinger becomes lodged in human skin like a small harpoon. In this documentary-scientific episode, we'll compare wasps and bees step by step: how they differ in appearance, why wasps have such thin waists, why bees have hairs on their bodies, how bee and wasp stings work, why bees die after stinging, while wasps can attack again. We'll also explore why bees use alarm odors, why this odor resembles bananas, how bees find their way home from several kilometers away, and why they perform a dance that conveys the direction and distance of flowers. A separate section of the episode will discuss which wasps and bees sting most often. It turns out that insects don't choose their victims randomly. Sudden movements, dark clothing, strong perfume, the noise of a lawnmower, proximity to a nest, and late summer can dramatically increase the risk of a sting. In August and early autumn, wasps become especially persistent, not because they're "going crazy," but because their seasonal life cycle is changing: the larvae no longer produce sugary liquid, the nest ages, and adult wasps seek sugar from humans. This video is suitable for those interested in animals, insects, nature, biology, bee and wasp behavior, safety around hives and wasp nests, and those who want to understand how to properly behave around stinging insects. We won't just scare you with stings. We'll explore the true logic of wasp and bee behavior: when they defend themselves, when they hunt, when they search for sugar, and why humans sometimes become targets. This is an original documentary series from the "Animals and Facts" channel. The script, structure, narration, editing, and visuals were prepared specifically for this video. Some of the footage may be taken from open and licensed stock services, including Pexels, Pixabay, Envato Elements, and other sites. These materials serve as illustrations for the author's script. IN THIS VIDEO: 00:00 — Wasps and Bees: Whom They Sting Most Often 00:50 — How a Wasp Differences from a Bee 01:42 — The Wasp's Waist and Guided Weapon 02:08 — Why a Bee is Covered in Hairs 02:19 — The Bee as a Forager, the Wasp as a Predator 03:02 — Why Bees and Wasps Are Closely Related 03:44 — A Bee and Wasp Flight Under a Stopwatch 04:09 — How Many Wing Beats Does a Bee Make 04:55 — Why Maneuvering is More Important to a Wasp Than Speed 05:47 — Why Flicking Often Ends in a Sting 06:32 — The Bee and Wasp Sting: The Main Difference 06:47 — Why a Bee's Sting Works Like a Harpoon 07:12 — Why a Bee Dies After a Sting 08:07 — Why a Wasp Can Sting again 09:23 — Alarm pheromone and the scent of banana 10:20 — Why bees can increase in number after the first sting 11:11 — What provokes wasps and bees 11:38 — Portrait of a person who gets stung more often 12:17 — The different lives of a hive and a wasp nest 12:26 — Why a bee colony survives the winter 12:53 — How a bee finds its way home 13:09 — The dance of bees and the color map 13:47 — Why a wasp nest lasts only one season 14:20 — Why wasps are especially persistent at the end of summer 15:17 — Who do wasps and bees sting most often? 15:36 — Why are men more often among victims? 16:07 — Behavior that insects interpret as a threat 16:29 — How to reduce the risk of a sting 16:57 — Why the appearance of a wasp and a bee Deceives 17:24 — Why bees and wasps are essential to nature 17:44 — How to behave around a wasp or a bee 17:56 — Finale: Who are you more afraid of? Sources used in preparing this issue: Encyclopaedia Britannica — Bee Encyclopaedia Britannica — Wasp National Geographic — Bees and wasps University of Minnesota Extension — Wasps and bees Cornell University — Honey bee biology and behavior USDA — Honey bees and pollination CDC — Stinging insects and allergic reactions Scientific studies on honey bee alarm pheromones Scientific reviews on bee waggle dance and navigation Extension materials on yellowjackets, wasps, and late-summer behavior Key topics: wasps, bees, wasp and bee, wasp sting, bee sting, bee sting, why does a bee die after stinging, alarm pheromone, smell Banana, beehive, wasp nest, bee dance, bee navigation, stinging insects, insect behavior, biology, nature. #wasps #bees #wasp #bee #insects #stings #beebit #animalfacts #nature #biology #populacescience

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