Honey bees make up a vast kingdom of flying insects that are distributed throughout the world, adapting to changing environments of high or low temperatures, but with the exception of living in Antarctica due to the freezing point. They live in dry and arid areas, but with plants or in humid places with dense vegetation, they always look for places surrounded by flowers. This arthropod has an excellent ability to collect nectar and develop community methods for obtaining honey.
Bees are typically bright yellow and orange with black and white stripes depending on the species they represent, as they are classified into over 15,000 species and more yet to be cataloged. They are between 10 and 20 mm long and have 6 legs placed very close to the middle of the body. What doesn't change is that bees have 3 separate body parts: head, thorax, and abdomen.
This time I present to you a collection of photographs of an Apis Mellifera specimen that posed on my small red table, so I could detail its membranous wings, compound eyes, its 6 legs and the pair of antennae that characterize insects.