The Queen bee, (which by the way, is head of the hive, not the king), is fed "royal jelly", which is a creamy substance made in glands on the worker bee's heads.
The queen bee is fed nectar by the attendant bees.Royal jelly is fed to all larvae for the first three days after hatching from the egg. Worker and drone larvae are then weaned on to a mixture of royal jelly, pollen and honey. Queen larvae are fed exclusively on royal jelly right up to the point the cells are capped and they pupate.
Well about 2007 February 3rd i caught a Queen wasp i am pretty good at this do to i have a extreme interest in any kinda of insect, arachnids, etc...... Anyway........... when i caught the Queen wasp i had took, the about 1 inch diameter nest with her to. I made a well connected makeshift home of about three well sized clear tuppleware containers, and welded them together the best i could. I then put the nest there in the largest container that was a square shape with a blue lid . i then put a square shaped slot in the lid and took tape put some on the left hand side of a rectangular piece of glass and i put it over the square slot, and then made about 8 holes in the top all different sizes so that i could put the stick like part on the bottom of the nest through these holes, i was finnaly done. Now back to what a queen wasp eats. well they pretty much eat most smaller insects they then either dismember the body of the insect or chew up they insect and then feed it to her young and while at the same time she was rolling the ball of insect flesh around with her legs and at that time i notced that the blood around the lump of insect flesh was slowly disappering so my guess is that she was not really eating at all but was drinking the blood, creapy eh........ well not for me but anyway that is where i got my idea that queen wasps don't eat anything they actually drink blood like a spider hahaha but the is there source of nourishement and they then take the lump uf insect flesh and separate the ball and distribute it to her young.
Wasps eat things like Spiders, caterpillars, ants, bees, and flies. Some of these flies are the types of ones that attack flowers, so despite their reputation wasps have their benefits in gardens. Wasps also feed on nectar.
Ryan is
awesome :D
Nectar, like bees.
why is a football stadium so col
Queen wasps do have stingers.
Well i would say they eat the pollen, or the inside of a flower i think!
Honey is saved up and stored nectar. All bees share in it as a food source
Oak Apple Gall Wasps cannot sting
There are nearly 300 types of wasps worldwide. The most common of these include: * Fig wasps - agaonidae * Cuckoo wasps - Chrysididae * Sand wasps (Cicada killer wasp) - Crabronidae * Gall wasps - Cynipidae * Velvet ants - (mutillidae * Fairyflies - Mymaridae * Spider wasps - Pompilidae * Digger wasps - Sphecidae * Flower wasps - Tiphiidae * Honets - Vaspidae * Paper wasps * Pollen wasps * Yellowjackets
Red wasps are wasps that are red and they will sting you in the balls.
Wasps don't usually bite, they sting. Wasp is some cases can bite and sting at the same time.
yes
Oak Apple Gall Wasps cannot sting
There are nearly 300 types of wasps worldwide. The most common of these include: * Fig wasps - agaonidae * Cuckoo wasps - Chrysididae * Sand wasps (Cicada killer wasp) - Crabronidae * Gall wasps - Cynipidae * Velvet ants - (mutillidae * Fairyflies - Mymaridae * Spider wasps - Pompilidae * Digger wasps - Sphecidae * Flower wasps - Tiphiidae * Honets - Vaspidae * Paper wasps * Pollen wasps * Yellowjackets
sting.. it hurts!
A sting.
Red wasps are wasps that are red and they will sting you in the balls.
Baby wasps are grubs. When they eventually change into adult wasps, that is when they can sting.
Wasps and Bee's are insects that sting.
Unlike bees, wasps have a smooth sting and can easily withdraw it after stinging. They can also sting more than once.
Wasps don't usually bite, they sting. Wasp is some cases can bite and sting at the same time.
no
No. This is only true of honeybees. Wasps do not lose their stingers and can sting multiple times.
They can do, although they will only do that if they can't escape.