You just leave it there. It's not like there is anything you can do to save it anyway. And if you could, It'd just get up as soon as it's not dieing and just sting you over and over and over again untill you swatted it away and then it'd just start dieing again. Wasps are territorial basically.
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.
Yes, there is a queen wasp in a wasp colony. The queen's primary role is to lay eggs and reproduce, while worker wasps handle the day-to-day tasks of building the nest, foraging for food, and caring for the colony.
A wasp causes a wasp sting
Yes - there are many types of wasps in California including: German yellowjacket, western yellowjacket, California yellowjacket, paper wasp, mud dauber, fig wasp, Western sand wasp, square headed wasp, bee wolf, Pacific burrowing wasp, gall wasp, soldier wasp, club horned wasp, burrowing wasp, blue mud wasp, cutworm wasp, thread-waisted wasp, mason wasp, potter wasp, and pollen wasp. Obviously this is not a complete list - just scratching the surface really - but it does demonstrate that California has plenty of wasps.
There are far more fatalities from people getting bee or wasp stings than being attacked by a bear, so the former, not the latter.
He was stung by a wasp.
'Wasp' is 'boombur.'
Just like you did: wasp.
WASP - AM - was created in 1968.
vespiary[Latin vespa, wasp + (ap)iary.]
The fly digger wasp, since the wasp eats the fly.
The queen wasp holds more power and influence within a wasp colony compared to the normal wasps.