well....kinda.......its pretoxin in the wasp stingers but it matures into a toxin around day 23 of the wasps short life. so the answer would be yes after the 23rd day. Dr. knowitall
if you put vinegar on wasp stings it will help because wasp stings have alkali in it and vinegar is a weak acid but bee stings are different they are acidic so if you put toothpaste on it it will help (try not to get bee stings mixed up with wasp stings because it will hurt even more if you put toothpaste on wasp stings or vinegar on bee stings)
Bee stings and most wasp stings include formic acid, so the pH is acid. However, the portal of entry of the injected toxin is so small that an application of baking soda or the like is likely to be ineffective. The pH of bee venom is between 5.0 and 5.5. The pH of wasp venom is 6.8 to 6.9: it is almost neutral.
Yes
the wasp stings the enemies.
NOT ME! They hurt more!!! It all depends on your individual response to the different venom they inject you with. I've always been more leery of red wasps because it always hurts and swells more than black ones, but that is just me.
The main venom in wasp stings is formic acid.
Formic acid.
It f0331ng stings!
the wasp sting is full of venom which is alkaline
You tell by if it stings you or not . If it does it is a Queen wasp , they only sting . Hope I helped
Wasp stings contain venom composed of various proteins and peptides. The main components are histamine, acetylcholine, and serotonin, which cause pain, inflammation, and other allergic reactions. The venom is injected into the skin through the stinger when a wasp stings.
It is a fallacy that you can neutralise wasp venom with vinegar. It came from people believing wasp venom was alkaline: in fact it isn't, it is chemically pretty well neutral. Vinegar is known to have some soothing action for certain skin conditions, but I think with wasp stings a lot of it is a placebo effect.