Yellow jacket wasps are territorial. When you come upon a yellow jacket wasp hive it is important to either have a plan of action in place to prevent serious injuries from occurring.
Wasps, Honey Bees, and Killer Bees are all relatives of the Yellow Jacket.
Pine trees are very fragrant and have sweet sap. This is the reason you will find bees such as yellow jacket wasps attracted to pine trees.
Some do have underground nests. The yellow jacket is an example.
A yellow jacket is 'une veste jaune' or 'une jaquette jaune' in French is you're talking about clothing. The insect is "une guêpe" (fem.) when talking of wasps.
Yellow jackets are wasps, and wasps do not produce honey. They do not forage for nectar and the larvae are carnivorous and feed off other insects.
Yellow jackets are a type of predatory wasp that belong to the anthropoid niche. These types of wasps are beneficial to help control pest insects.
No, wasps cannot transfer snake venom in their sting.
well they for what i know is they live in wood and i have a lot of them and they bite at it and leave it alone please they can have thousands of them in one nest
Guinea wasps have a very painful sting. It is a type of paper wasp. It is yellow and black and often mistaken for a yellow jacket.
The yellow jacket has a total of eight appendages. As an insect, the yellow jacket has six legs as well as one pair of antennae.
Yellow jackets (wasps) and bees are two different species. However, they both have very sensitive senses of smell, with the sensors on their antennae.
Yellow jacket is the North American name for insects that in the rest of the world are more usually called wasps. There are a large number of varieties of these predatory wasps. They taxonomic classification isKingdom: AnimaliaPhylum: ArthropodaClass: InsectaOrder: HymenopteraFamily: VespidaeSubfamily: VespinaeGenus: Vespula or Dolichovespula