Potter wasps create elaborate nests with many cells. The adult wasps lay eggs inside these cells where they remain until the larvae hatch.
Some can lay eggs in their host which eats them alive from the inside out. An example is the Pepsis wasp which lays it's eggs in tarantulas. Another is the Ichneumon wasp which lays it's eggs on caterpillars. And there's a lot more out there.
The queen wasp and a male wasp mate, and the next summer she lays the eggs and than later, BOOM, the wasp are born.
There is a special kind of wasp, not the normal wasp that stings, but his wasp lays eggs on a horn worm and as soon as these eggs hatch, the wasps will eat the horn worm.
yes. every wasp does. wasps die after 22 days from their larve.
Cuckoo Wasp lays their eggs in the nest of other species and feed its chick on them. It lays eggs near to the eggs of the host. The cuckoo Wasp egg hatches first and the larva eats the food that is stored by the host for their larva. Sometimes it waits for the host's eggs to hatch so that it can make it their food.
A wasp that lays its eggs in the stems of plants. A plant with such an egg in it grows a greatly swollen tumor call a gall.
an ant or wasp are examples. most are insects
No they don't. The queen lays eggs and fertilises them using sperm she collects from male wasps.
The Cicada Killer is a species of large wasp. The female stings a cicada to imobilize it. It then carries the cicada to a ground borrow where it then lays its eggs on the cicada. When the eggs hatch, the larva of the wasp utilize the body of the cicada for food.
It depends on the size of the nest she builds, but the fertilized queen lays a single egg in each cell of her nest. The eggs hatch within a week.
Yes, there is a bee which lays eggs under human skin. first it gets hold of a female mosquito, lays its eggs on it. Then the mosquito, a blood sucker comes and sucks the blood of a human. The eggs eventually are dropped on the skin . Then the eggs go insinde and grow. See more about this on Animal Planet
These are caused by the gall wasp, Andricus quercuscalicis which lays its eggs inside the acorn and causes it to mutate.