No , the wasp being cut off from oxygen and subjected to digestive acids would be dead .
nope
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.
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.
Wasp-Eze spray is still available as of May 2014. It can be found at pharmacies in the United Kingdom or be purchased online.
the wasp....?
Do you mean tarantula, a big spider One tarantula killer is the tarantula hawk wasp. It actively hunts, and paralyses with their sting, for their larvae to feed on whilst they are still alive.
Example sentence - I knew the wasp sting would be painful.
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.
Probably neither. The stinging hairs on the nettle would not be strong enough to penetrate the wasp's exoskeleton, and the wasp would have no reason to sting the nettle.
The wasp huffs gas to get high
No, a wasp doesn't die if it stings but a honey bee does.
When a wasp is close to death it will stop flying or trying to fly. Its movements will become slow and jerky and it will not respond to external stimuli. When in this state, a wasp can still sting, however.