Wasps cannot see the color red. But see much the same colors we do.
Yes, they can.
nuthien
birds, wasps and humans
Humans can consume wasp honey it's just not as localised as you would see bee honey.
No wasps bite humans, but if you mean sting, then most of them do
Most wasps do not produce honey, but there are wasps which do. Wasp honey is not consumed by humans.
Wasps do not collect other dead wasps. However, if a wasp is injured, it will emit a special pheromone that will warn other wasps that there is danger nearby. Sometimes other wasps will come to see what that danger might be.
yes the predators are wasps bees frogs and humans
There are many websites where one can see videos of wasps attacking other creatures. One can see videos of wasps attacking other creatures at popular on the web sources such as YouTube and Vimeo.
Sand wasps are not aggressive insects in comparison to other wasps. If a human were to approach a sand wasp or their underground nests they will not try to attack. However, sand wasps do have stingers and would probably use them on humans if provoked of if they felt threatened.
Yes there have been multiple cases of emerald jewel wasp attacks on humans wherein the victim was swarmed by a colony of wasps and was turned into a food source for their offspring.
That depends on which wasp you are talking about. Yellowjackets and hornets and paper and potter and mason wasps and are in the family Vespidae, digger wasps, mud daubers, and most solitary wasps are in the family Sphecidae, and the little chunky sand wasps you see on a baseball field are in the family Crabronidae.
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