Yes, a wasp has a segmented body, comprised of three main body parts: head, thorax, and abdomen. These segments allow the wasp to have flexibility and movement.
The Hypothallimous.
The Cicada Wasp has a black body with blue wings. This wasp also features red and yellow stripes near its stinger.
Tails and legs help support a vertebrates body and allow it to move. Other structures to help a body move are muscle and bones.
In a wasp colony, the queen wasp typically has a larger body size and more aggressive behavior compared to the worker wasps.
They don't exactly 'help' the wasp to reproduce ! Some species of wasp actively prey on tarantulas. They paralyse the spider with powerful venom (but don't kill it). The helpless spider is dragged into the wasps burrow - where it lays an egg on the spider's body. The grub hatches and, as it grows, it eats the spider alive before pupating into an adult wasp !
No. A wasp is an insect and no insect has a bony skeleton. Its hard outer casing gives its body its shape.
If your skin were to be stung by a wasp, the stinger would be pulled out of the wasp, and into your skin, which has poison in it, which would mean, poison would be injected into your body.
The physical characteristic of a wasp that distinguishes it from other insects is its slender or skinny body shape.
it is there jaw, teeth and huge paws
The Ladyfinger moth has a black or brown body and pink wings. This species of moth happens to look like a wasp.
Japanese hornet I actually found out what it is. Its a horn tailed wasp...also called a wood wasp