wasp"s nest - definizione. Che cos'è wasp"s nest
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Cosa (chi) è wasp"s nest - definizione

GENUS OF INSECTS
Hornets; Vespa (genus); Vespa (wasp); Hornet's nest; Asian hornets
  • Life history of ''[[Vespa crabro]]''
  • honey bee]].
  • The structure of an incipient nest

Metoecus paradoxus         
SPECIES OF INSECT
Wasp Nest Beetle
Metoecus paradoxus, also known as the wasp nest beetle and eyelash bug, is a species of Metoecus in the family Ripiphoridae.
Wasp         
  • Social wasps constructing a paper nest
  • isbn=978-0896599314}}</ref>
  • 1880}}, one of nine [[Royal Navy]] warships to bear the name
  • provision]] a nest
  • ''[[Polistes]]'' sp., India
  • Male ''[[Electrostephanus petiolatus]]'' fossil from the [[Middle Eocene]], preserved in [[Baltic amber]]
  • [[Wasp waist]], c. 1900, demonstrated by [[Polaire]], a French actress famous for this [[silhouette]]
  • [[Potter wasp]] building mud nest, France. The latest ring of mud is still wet.
  • European hornet, ''[[Vespa crabro]]''
  • Bembix oculata]]'' ([[Crabronidae]]) feeding on a fly after paralysing it with its sting
  • Wasps are [[paraphyletic]], consisting of the [[clade]] [[Apocrita]] without [[ant]]s and [[bee]]s, which are not usually considered to be wasps. The [[Hymenoptera]] also contain the somewhat wasplike [[Symphyta]], the sawflies. The familiar [[common wasp]]s and [[yellowjacket]]s belong to one family, the [[Vespidae]].
MEMBERS OF THE ORDER HYMENOPTERA WHICH ARE NOT ANTS NOR BEES (COMPARE Q1065202, Q1076176)
Wasps; Wasp venoms; Vespine; Wasp facts; Ground wasps; Social wasp; Pollinator wasp; Dendrocerus scutellaris
·noun Any one of numerous species of stinging hymenopterous insects, ·esp. any of the numerous species of the genus Vespa, which includes the true, or social, wasps, some of which are called yellow jackets.
WASP         
  • Social wasps constructing a paper nest
  • isbn=978-0896599314}}</ref>
  • 1880}}, one of nine [[Royal Navy]] warships to bear the name
  • provision]] a nest
  • ''[[Polistes]]'' sp., India
  • Male ''[[Electrostephanus petiolatus]]'' fossil from the [[Middle Eocene]], preserved in [[Baltic amber]]
  • [[Wasp waist]], c. 1900, demonstrated by [[Polaire]], a French actress famous for this [[silhouette]]
  • [[Potter wasp]] building mud nest, France. The latest ring of mud is still wet.
  • European hornet, ''[[Vespa crabro]]''
  • Bembix oculata]]'' ([[Crabronidae]]) feeding on a fly after paralysing it with its sting
  • Wasps are [[paraphyletic]], consisting of the [[clade]] [[Apocrita]] without [[ant]]s and [[bee]]s, which are not usually considered to be wasps. The [[Hymenoptera]] also contain the somewhat wasplike [[Symphyta]], the sawflies. The familiar [[common wasp]]s and [[yellowjacket]]s belong to one family, the [[Vespidae]].
MEMBERS OF THE ORDER HYMENOPTERA WHICH ARE NOT ANTS NOR BEES (COMPARE Q1065202, Q1076176)
Wasps; Wasp venoms; Vespine; Wasp facts; Ground wasps; Social wasp; Pollinator wasp; Dendrocerus scutellaris
(WASPs)
WASP is used to refer to the people in American society whose ancestors came from northern Europe, especially England, and who are considered to have a lot of power and influence. WASP is an abbreviation for 'White Anglo-Saxon Protestant'. (AM)
...a WASP with a Yale degree.
N-COUNT: also N n [disapproval]

Wikipedia

Hornet

Hornets (insects in the genus Vespa) are the largest of the eusocial wasps, and are similar in appearance to their close relatives yellowjackets. Some species can reach up to 5.5 cm (2.2 in) in length. They are distinguished from other vespine wasps by the relatively large top margin of the head. Worldwide, 22 species of Vespa are recognized. Most species only occur in the tropics of Asia, though the European hornet (V. crabro), is widely distributed throughout Europe, Russia, North America, and north-eastern Asia. Wasps native to North America in the genus Dolichovespula are commonly referred to as hornets (e.g., baldfaced hornets), but are actually yellowjackets.

Like other social wasps, hornets build communal nests by chewing wood to make a papery pulp. Each nest has one queen, which lays eggs and is attended by workers that, while genetically female, cannot lay fertile eggs. Most species make exposed nests in trees and shrubs, but some (such as Vespa orientalis) build their nests underground or in other cavities. In the tropics, these nests may last year-round, but in temperate areas, the nest dies over the winter, with lone queens hibernating in leaf litter or other insulative material until the spring. Male hornets are docile and do not have stingers.

Hornets are often considered pests, as they aggressively guard their nesting sites when threatened and their stings can be more dangerous than those of bees.