can someone actually answer this?
joes turkey bagule
A wasp is in the genus Hymenopera, family Vespidae
Order: Hymenoptera Family: Ichneumonidae
Order: Hymenoptera Family: Vespidae
The application of pesticides will kill the parasitic wasp so there is no need for both.
That depends on which wasp you are talking about. Yellowjackets and hornets and paper and potter and mason wasps and are in the family Vespidae, digger wasps, mud daubers, and most solitary wasps are in the family Sphecidae, and the little chunky sand wasps you see on a baseball field are in the family Crabronidae.
That's a little vague. Only the certain species have binomial nomenclature, not the term that refers to a family. Wasp is a general name for the superfamilies Vespoidea and Sphecoidea.
Bees typically live in a vespiary, which is a nest created by social wasps. Bees create hives, while wasps build vespiaries.
For sure, that's one of my family's recipe.
A wasp causes a wasp sting
The Shiny Black Wasp is a parasitic wasp that helps control pest populations such as caterpillars and beetle larvae by laying its eggs inside them. When the eggs hatch, the wasp larvae consume the host from the inside, eventually killing it.
American, WASP, perhaps, although it's never mentioned on the series.
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.