Wasp larvae eat the insects that the adult wasps fetch for them.
Adults will go out, catch insects and either chew them there and then or take them back to the nest, butcher them and feed them to the young wasp larvae.
In return, the wasps larvae then secrete a sugary solution with 500% more energy than the insects alone. This is what the adults feed upon.
they do eat caterpilars.
yes
no
Yes. Earlier in the spring and summer, as the wasp tends its larvae, it eats a sweet substance that exudes from the larvae. In the autumn/fall, there are no more larvae and the wasp has to find an alternative food so turns the the sugary juice of the ripening fruits.
from larvae to adult
Adult sand wasps will feed upon nectar of flowering plants, while their larvae are fed flies and other insects.
wasps life cycle is that they start as anegg, then hatch and become larvae, the adults put the larvae in comb shaped cells, the adults then feed the larvae. once fed the larvae are enclosed within the cell, when they are done growing they eat there way out. the larvae are now nymphs. they will then become adults!
sadly i have tried this and no it does not eat the wasp.
We can't answer this question without knowing what the wasp venom is being compared with.
The eggs of the Ichneumon wasp are inserted into the tunnels of a pigeon tremex. The larvae develop over the winter and adults emerge in the spring.
Gall Wasps create Galls in trees. There larvae feed off of the Galls that have been created. Adults do not feed at all, and have a very short life span.
Certain species of wasp lay their eggs inside fruits like a mango. The eggs hatch and the larvae eat their way out of the fruit.
The eggs of the Ichneumon wasp are inserted into the tunnels of a pigeon tremex. The larvae develop over the winter and adults emerge in the spring.
There is a wasp called Stictia Carolina that attacks horse flies, stuns them and takes the stunned horsefly back to it's burrow where it lays eggs in it, the horse fly is then eaten by the hatching larvae.
Usually a spider wasp crawls to the trapdoor spider's hole and if manages to get inside, lays her eggs into the spider. The larvae hatch and slowly eat the trapdoor spider from inside out.