Like most insects a bee has four wings.
The presence of four legs, shells, scales, or wings differs among insect species. While most insects have six legs and some have wings, there are exceptions to these characteristics within the insect world. For example, not all insects have wings; some may have only three pairs of legs due to evolutionary adaptations.
most insects have four wings, execpt for fleas who lost them and flies and mosquitous who have two
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Three pairs for insects, four for arachnids, five for crustaceans and many for centi/millipedes.
Locus are considered halal in Islamic dietary laws because they are classified as insects with four wings and four walking legs. In Islam, such insects are permissible to consume as long as they have been properly slaughtered according to Islamic guidelines.
True flies have two wings. There are many species of fly and together they comprise the order of insects known as 'Diptera' -- literally 'two wings'. Fruit flies, blowflies, common house flies, crane flies and even mosquitoes and midges are examples of these true flies. By contrast, most insects have four wings (i.e. two pairs of wings), including a range of insects with 'fly' in their names. Butterflies, dragonflies, damselfiles and mayflie, for example, all have four wings. by john forbes talk to me on xbox gamertag: playdough
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A lightning bug, like all insects, has 6 legs.
Two sets fo wings (four total) and three sets of legs (six total). The prothorax carries legs, metathorax legs and wings, and meosthorax legs and wings. Not all adult insects have two sets of wings, but they all have six legs. Other arthropods have different parts all toghether.
Bees and almost all winged insects have four wings. Sometimes the first wing has evolved into a hard protective shell, as in the beetles. Bees can fly for miles looking for flowers, but always find their way back to their hive. They do a "dance" to communicate to other bees and show them how to fly in order to find the right flowers.
An alderfly is one of a member of 66 separate species of the Sialidae family of insects, which has filamentous antennae, four large dark wings, and does not exceed a length of one inch.