Wasps can die from many things, including from humans, bug repellent, and birds.
As winter approaches, newly-mated queen will find a place in which to hibernate, the rest die as their body temperatures drop too low.
No, a wasp has a smooth sting so it can withdraw it easily and re-use it.
the wasp sting is full of venom which is alkaline
Yes, a bee does die, where as a wasp doesn't.
acid
Toothpaste reduces the pain and swelling of a bee sting (because toothpaste is a base and the bee sting is acidic) Toothpaste doesn't help wasp stings because wasp stings and toothpaste are alkali. (However vinegar works well on wasp stings because vinegar is acidic)
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.
No, a wasp doesn't die if it stings but a honey bee does.
If you are allergic, yes, if you don't treat it then you could likely die.
the wasp sting is full of venom which is alkaline
Yes, a bee does die, where as a wasp doesn't.
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)
they both die because if the bee stings the wasp it would kill the wasp but the bee would die to because when ever a bee stings something it die thats why both of them will die.
Yes
the wasp stings the enemies.
The main venom in wasp stings is formic acid.
It f0331ng stings!
acid
Formic acid.