The fly digger wasp, since the wasp eats the fly.
Parasitism; field digger wasps feed on flies.
mutualism
It f0331ng stings!
yes. every wasp does. wasps die after 22 days from their larve.
Figs and fig wasps have a special relationship that is essential to their mutual survival. The fig provides a home for the wasp and the wasp provides the pollen that the fruit needs to ripen. The insect's life cycle begins when a tiny female wasp enters a fig and begins laying eggs inside it.
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.
The lowly wasp certainly has its place in the food chain. Indeed, the question should possibly be,
im not sure if a digger wasp is the same thing as just a wasp lol , but i came here to ask the same question because a few minutes ago i was cleaning the dishes when i noticed a wasp and fly stuck together at first i taught it was to wasps mating but then i seen the fly drop to the window ledge an bearly able to move im thinking the wasp was trying to drink its blood like it does with caterpillars or maybe it was stinging the fly
A wasp or hornet that is very large with a black bottom with 4 yellow stripes and a possible brown top could describe more than one type of wasp. It could be Digger wasps, or yellow jacket wasps.
A digger wasp is an insect that would dig a big mound of sand. Another possibility would be a sand flea, however it is not considered an insect.
Sounds like Digger Wasps
Adults feed on nectar derived from the blossoms of various plants; larvae feed on beetle larvae. Green June beetle, May beetle, and Japanese beetle grubs seem to be the primary host.