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Yellow Jackets
Paravespula vulgaris
Yellowjacket wasps often become a nuisance in Ohio, especially from August
through October, as they build up in large populations and scavenge for
human food (carbonated beverages, cider, juices, ripe fruits and vegetables,
candy, ice cream, fish, ham, hamburgers, hot dogs, etc.) at picnics, cookouts,
outside restaurants, bakeries, campsites, fairs, sports events and other
outdoor get-togethers. Many are attracted in large numbers to garbage
cans and other trash receptacles. Others fly in and out of nests built
around homes, buildings and areas where people live, work and play, causing
fear and alarm. Although yellowjackets are considered quite beneficial
to agriculture since they feed abundantly on harmful flies and caterpillars,
it is their boldness (sometimes aggressiveness) and painful stinging ability
that cause most concern. Nevertheless, unless the threat of stings and
nest location present a hazard, it is often best to wait for Mother Nature,
with freezing temperatures in late November and December, to kill off
these annual colonies. Stinging workers do not survive the winter and
the same nest is not reused.
Identification
A typical yellowjacket worker is about 1/2-inch long, short and blocky,
with alternating black and yellow bands on the abdomen while the queen
is larger, about 3/4-inch long. (The different black and yellow patterns
on the abdomen help separate various species.) Workers are sometimes confused
with honey bees, especially when flying in and out of their nests. Yellowjackets,
in contrast to honey bees, are not covered with tan-brown dense hair on
their bodies and lack the flattened hairy hind legs used to carry pollen.
Yellowjackets have a lance-like stinger without barbs and can sting repeatedly
whereas honey bees have a barbed stinger and sting only once. Some have
yellow on the face. Mouthparts are well-developed for capturing and chewing
insects with a tongue for sucking nectar, fruit and other juices. Nests
are built in trees, shrubs or in protected places such as inside human-made
structures (attics, hollow walls or flooring, in sheds, under porches
and eaves of houses), or in soil cavities, mouse burrows, etc. Nests are
made from wood fiber chewed into a paper-like pulp.
Life Cycle and Habits
Yellowjackets are social wasps living in colonies containing workers,
queens and males. Colonies are annual with only inseminated queens overwintering.
Fertilized queens occur in protected places as hollow logs, in stumps,
under bark, in leaf litter, in soil cavities and human-made structures.
Queens emerge during the warm days of late April or early May, select
a nest site and build a small paper nest in which eggs are laid. After
eggs hatch from the 30 to 50 brood cells, the queen feeds the young larvae
for about 18 to 20 days. Larvae pupate, emerging later as small, infertile
females called workers. By mid-June, the first adult workers emerge and
assume the tasks of nest expansion, foraging for food, care of the queen
and larvae, and colony defense. From this time until her death in the
autumn, the queen remains inside the nest laying eggs. The colony then
expands rapidly reaching a maximum size of 4,000 to 5,000 workers and
a nest of 10,000 to 15,000 cells in August and late September. At peak
size, reproductive cells are built with new males and queens produced.
Adult reproductives remain in the nest fed by the workers. New queens
build up fat reserves to overwinter. Adult reproductives leave the parent
colony to mate. After mating, males quickly die while fertilized queens
seek protected places to overwinter. Parent colony workers dwindle, usually
leaving the nest and die, as does the foundress queen. Abandoned nests
rapidly decompose and disintegrate during the winter. Nests inside structures
will persist as long as they are dry. Nests are not used again. In the
spring, the cycle is repeated. (Weather in the spring is the most important
factor in colony establishment.) Although adults feed primarily on items
rich in sugars and carbohydrates (fruits, flower nectar and tree sap),
the larvae feed on proteins (insects, meats, fish, etc.). Adult workers
chew and condition the meat fed to the larvae. Larvae in return secrete
a sugar material relished by the adults. (This exchange of material is
known as trophallaxis.) In late autumn, foraging workers (nuisance scavengers)
change their food preference from meats to ripe, decaying fruits since
larvae in the nest fail to meet requirements as a source of sugar.
In 1975, the German yellowjacket first appeared in Ohio and has now become
the dominant species over the Eastern yellowjacket. It is bold, aggressive
and, if provoked, can sting repeatedly and painfully. The German yellowjacket
builds a grey, brittle, papery soccer or football shaped nest in structures
with the peak worker population between 1,000 to 3,000 individuals between
May to November. The Eastern yellowjacket builds a tan, fragile papery
soccer or football shaped nest underground with the peak worker population
between 1,000 to 3,000 individuals between May to November similar to
the Common yellowjacket. Nests are built entirely of wood fiber (usually
weathered or dead) and are completely enclosed (football or soccer shaped)
except for a small opening (entrance) at the bottom. The nest may be located
below the soil or aerial with the paper envelope covering containing multiple,
horizontal tiers of combs (10 or more) within. Larvae hang down in combs.
Sting Prevention
It is always best to avoid unnecessary stings. Should a yellowjacket wasp
fly near you or land on your body, never swing or strike at it or run
rapidly away since quick movements often provoke attack and painful stings.
When a wasp is near you, slowly raise your hands to protect your face
remaining calm and stationary for a while and then move very slowly (avoid
stepping on the ground nest), backing out through bushes or moving indoors
to escape. Wasps and bees can fly about six to seven miles per hour so
humans can outrun them. However, by the time one starts running, there
could quickly be a dozen or so painful stings caused by the rapid movement.
There is an old saying that "one who stands still and shoots an aerial
nest with a shotgun need not fear, instead it is the person that rapidly
runs away who gets all the stings." Never strike, swing or crush
a wasp or bee against your body since it could incite nearby yellowjackets
into a frenzied attack. Wasp venom contains a chemical "alarm pheromone,"
released into the air, signaling guard wasps to come and sting whomever
and whatever gets in their way. Unfortunately, many serious accidents
have resulted when one runs away from attacking wasps and into the path
of automobiles. When a bee or wasp gets into a moving car, remain calm.
They almost never sting when in enclosed spaces as a car or house. Instead,
they fly against windows. Slowly and safely pull over off the road, open
the windows and allow the insect to escape.
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