go through your own
complete
It goes through complete metamorphosis.
Wasps undergo a complete metamorphosis from larva to adult during pupation.
They have a stinger for defense if they feel threatened, and they have wins to fly to new habitats and avoid predators
Grasshoppers do not go through a pupal stage. Insects fall into two major groups, holometabolous (complete metamorphosis: pupal stage) and hemimetabolous (incomplete metamorphosis: no pupal stage). Grasshoppers are hemimetabolous, like crickets, mayflies, stinkbugs, etc., and insects that undergoe incomplete metamorphosis do not have a pupal stage. Holometabolous insects such as flies, butterflies, beetles, wasps, etc. do undergoe complete metamorphosis and they all have a pupal stage.
No, like most insects, honey bees have a complete lifecycle (egg, larva, pupa, adult). Only insects such as cockroaches have an incomplete metamorphosis (egg, several stages of nymph or 'instar' then adult, with no larval/pupal stages)
Wasps breath through their skin.
through a necter straw
yes
Believe it or not they do! They have tiny holes called spiricles that are the openings to trachae which are their breathing pipes.
Young queen wasps will hibernate through their first winter to start new colonies in the spring, all other wasps die when the cold weather comes.
Red wasps are wasps that are red and they will sting you in the balls.
There are many types of wasps (over 100,000 species), but they usually fall into one of the two categories - solitary or social. Solitary wasps - mud daubers, pollen wasps, potter wasps. Social wasps - polistine paper wasps.