| You would be amazed at
how many different types of wasp we have in this country, or there
again maybe you wouldn't, anyway a bit about the wasp species...
These types of wasp are social and
like ants and sawflies, are of the order Hymenoptera and Family
Vespidae. Hymenoptera has about 6200 known species, if all the
above are included, with more being discovered every year. We'll
just concern ourselves with those species that directly intrude
into the idyllic situation that we call "The Home".
So we will deal with five or six species out of the nearly 300
types of wasp which inhabit our sunny climes.
Unlike the Honey Bee, wasps have not
developed methods of storing food for the winter, and this is
why their colonies only last for one season in temperate regions.
Each colony starts to break up in the autumn and the workers
die of cold. However, before this happens new queens and males
have been developed and have swarmed out of the colony to mate.
The males die soon after mating, but the young fertilised females
search for a sheltered spot where they can spend the winter.
Such dormant queens can often be found in outhouses and lofts
during the winter.
As with the ants, the colonies are
divided into queens, males, and workers, a bit like us really...
anyway, the queens and males are only concerned with reproduction
with the workers doing everything else. The first cell of the
colony is built by the queen (who usually emerges from her winter
quarters in mid-April) as there aren't any others, inside this
nest the queen constructs between 10 - 20 hexagonal cells where
she lays an egg in each. When these hatch the queen is kept
busy for the first month feeding the larva. When the larva pupate
and hatch (about the end of May) they become the workers after
which the queen can concentrate on laying more eggs as the workers
take over the running of the nest. In late summer, round about
September, a fully mature nest can have up to 25,000 individuals
in it
( Usually about 4-6000 )....not something
you would want to poke with a stick.
.
This is the nest that the queen starts above, it's actual size
is about that of a walnut but as soon as the workers hatch,
this rapidly increases and there was one treated in 1997, which
supposedly measured about 5 feet square or something like that,
and was up for the Guinness Book of Records. Unlike bees, the
wasps have no wax producing glands and therefore cannot construct
wax combs. To get around this they use paper which they make
from wood pulp, just like we make paper from wood pulp. The
wasps use their powerful jaws to scrape wood from trees and
fence posts, this is then chewed up and mixed with saliva and
then spread out to make combs, an example of this can be seen
below, usually there are about eight (8) tier like structures
inside the nest (see picture below) with all the cells opening
downwards. (Even the wasps know about our summers..!). The completed
nest is generally ball shaped, but not always, as those which
are built in cavities of house walls are naturally constrained
by the void in which they are building, and covered with a very
fine film of paper which is banded each band being the work
of one wasp. The entrance to the nest is usually near the bottom
All wasps fed their young on meat - insect larvae, scraps of
carrion and so on - and in this respect differ greatly from
bees which feed their young on nectar and pollen. The wings
of the prey are cut off by the workers powerful mouthparts and
the remains are divided up and chewed into round food balls
which are carried home to the larvae. The workers themselves
(these are females with underdeveloped reproductive organs)
feed on liquid food.
Although wasps are fond of sweet things,
they don't have the nectar sucking mouth parts of bees, but
they do have very powerful jaws and a short tongue. Even so
they can be seen drinking nectar from flowers and the juices
of ripe fruit, and curiously enough they are also fed by the
larvae. In exchange for fly flesh the larvae regurgitate a sugary
liquid which the workers eagerly lick up. In addition to providing
the workers with a form of energy this mutual feeding also has
a social function, for it serves to bind the colony together.
Wasps possess no pollen gathering
apparatus and are generally less hairy than bees. Their colours
are due mainly to the colours of the body plates or sclerites
and not to the colours of the hairs as in bees.
Towards the end of the summer, the
wasps rear males and females in special large cells. Once these
wasps have reached maturity, the colony begins to break up.
The workers have no more larvae to feed and they turn their
attention to fruit, jam, and other sweet substances, and this
is when they become a nuisance. But as the weather turns cold
they die, leaving only the mated queens to carry on the race
in the following year and they over winter underground emerging
in the spring. A nest which you may find in your roof space
which is empty will not be reoccupied, except in the case of
Hornets which can occupy the same nest although a completely
new colony.
The main thing that worries people
about wasps is their sting....
A wasp uses it's sting for killing prey, but it can also use
it very effectively for defending itself. The sting has associated
glands which produce a venom. A Hornet sting can be very painful,
but is normally not dangerous, as the amount of venom injected
is very small. In some cases, however, people do become ill
after being stung by a Hornet, or for that case any stinging
insect. In very extreme cases people suffer anaphylactic shock
which can prove fatal (see explanation below). A sting in the
mouth or on neck can be serious, as the mucus epithelium (see
below) may become very swollen, making it difficult for the
victim to breathe. An ordinary uncomplicated sting can be treated
with ammonia or alcohol or cold poultices, followed by an antihistimine
ointment. If the victim becomes pale and feels unwell with giddiness
and nausea it is advisable to seek medical advice immediately.Treatment
of Wasps Nests
Treatment of Wasps Nests
In the early months of the year when
the nests are small you can get away with knocking it down with
a stick or a shovel, as some people have told me they have done,
but as you get towards August-September this is really not advisable,
as you can tell from the information above.
When nests are small, buying an insecticidal
powder in a puffer pack and dusting the nest yourself is feasible,
but as the months progress and the size of the nest increases
it also becomes busier. Wasps have flight paths to and from
the nest, so one bad idea is to stand in the wrong place, as
you will get dive bombed and stung. Wasps also know when the
nest is under attack and will marshal their forces from the
nest and attack you. If you are stood outside the nest and you
kill a wasp, say by batting it one, that wasp will give off
a pheromone (scent) which will penetrate the nest giving the
alarm and bringing the rest of the workers out at you. Some
people have told me that they have used petrol and that it wouldn't
get the better of them, and I'm not paying that much just for
a wasps nest, and I'll do it myself there's nothing to it......weeeellll
best of luck.
To treat a mature nest takes expertise,
it is a risky business especially if it is sited in a roof void.
In my years in pest control I can honestly say that I have done
some ducking and diving in my time. These days pest controllers
are equipped with lances, some of which are up to 14 feet in
length, these lances fire insecticidal powder into nests under
the driving force of compressed carbon dioxide. These insecticides
are mostly carbamates, a sort of powder form of nerve toxin,
these are quite residual and normally not available to the public.
Pest controllers also have rapid knockdown liquid insecticides
which are quite expensive but very effective, again not normally
available to Joe Public. The best idea at the end of the day
is to get in a professional.
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