Bumble Bee's have mandibles which are more like jaws than individual teeth in fact in vertabrates they often are jaws filled with rows of teeth. Some of these mandibles in Bumble Bees and other arthropods have many serrations that act as teeth in a way to grab and tear food the insect is eating. In bees this is usually something only the queen has and the workers and drones have mandibles with no serrations at all.
Wasps do not collect other dead wasps. However, if a wasp is injured, it will emit a special pheromone that will warn other wasps that there is danger nearby. Sometimes other wasps will come to see what that danger might be.
I conclude that wasps are sensitive insects.
Yes, wood wasps are a type of wasp that are known for burrowing into wood. They are solitary insects and do not form colonies like other social wasps.
Destroying a wasp nest typically results in the death of most, if not all, of the wasps inside. Wasps are territorial creatures, so destroying their nest could lead to them rebuilding elsewhere or looking for a new area to nest.
Male wasps tend to be smaller and more slender than females. Additionally, male wasps typically have straighter antennae compared to the more curved antennae of females. In some species, male wasps have longer abdomens and lack a stinger.
Wasps sting and they have no hair
uit is possible bees have fur but wasps do not
There are many types of wasps (over 100,000 species), but they usually fall into one of the two categories - solitary or social. Solitary wasps - mud daubers, pollen wasps, potter wasps. Social wasps - polistine paper wasps.
There are male wasps (drones) and female wasps (queen and workers).
They make new wasps.
fear of wasps fear of wasps
They do not fly into your face and hair the way bees do, "sudden middle-of-nowhere-for-no-discernible-bleeding-reason they sting
A large number of wasps is called a swarm. Wasps are known to feed on other insects and there are over 20,000 species of wasps.
swaps
wasps'
Wasps do not collect other dead wasps. However, if a wasp is injured, it will emit a special pheromone that will warn other wasps that there is danger nearby. Sometimes other wasps will come to see what that danger might be.
A bethylid is a member of the Bethylidae, a family of aculeate wasps, which vary between parasitoid wasps and hunting wasps.