Polistes wasps. They make their nests out of wood pulp and will choose unfinished wood to chew.
Some bees chew wood. The best example is the carpenter bee. They will chew tunnels into wood and make their nest. Paper Wasps are relatives of the bees. They chew wood into a paste and spread it into thin sheets that dry to form the walls of their nests.
yes they are. They are called wood wasps because they like to hang around wood or timber.
Female wasps and all derived groups as ants and (bumble)bees have a stinger. Also its benefit is that it can protect it from predators.
Wasps chew wood fibres which, when mixed with their saliva, makes a form of paper. While it is still moist they can mould it to whatever shape they want. This is what they use to make their nests
no
Many chew on wood, but a beaver is one.
They don't chew on wood, but they do sometimes eat bark.
Well, wasps don't colect pollen bees do, wasps collect wood to make a hive at least that's what my friend said.
The common wasp chews up small pieces of bark from a nearby tree and uses it as a paste to build the walls of its nest. First, it builds the horizontal layers and then it covers them with an outer shell, leaving a gap at the bottom to get in and lay its eggs. As the sheets dry out in the Sun, they harden and produce a tough protective covering for the nest. **Taken from http://www.blurtit.com/q595691.html** No copyright intended
No wasp eats wood. There is a big species of wasp that has larvae eating wood, the Horntail (Uroceras gigas). Other wasps chew wood and use it to construct their nests. The hornet feeds itself with sap from the bark of trees and uses wood for nestbuilding also.
They chew it