Worldwide Beekeeping
Beekeeping => Other Pollinators => Topic started by: The15thMember on July 02, 2022, 07:02:38 pm
-
Last night while us adults were watching a rom-com (Table 19, I would highly recommend it) my young siblings were being biologists. They found a small paper wasp nest under the eaves of their chicken barn, and they fly-swattered the four adults who were guarding the nest to death and took down the nest. Then on the spur of the moment, they decided to dissect it. When the movie was over, they showed me all the developmental stages of the wasps that they had removed from the nest, from egg to pupa. I was super impressed with the kids' work. :yes: I was also extremely surprised to find that the wasp larvae appear to have strangely spherical bodies. :-\ Who knew!
(https://i.ibb.co/CbCTVTK/IMG-3998-3.jpg) (https://ibb.co/CbCTVTK)
-
That is pretty darned Cool!
-
Cool. I have to admit that I have taken down many paper wasp's nest and not once have I bothered to look inside.
-
Cool. I have to admit that I have taken down many paper wasp's nest and not once have I bothered to look inside.
I know right! That's why I was so impressed with the kids. They could have just knocked it down and gone back to playing, but they took the time to learn something instead. I'm so curious about everything that I usually at least look inside the nests I take down, but even I've never taken the time to dissect a whole nest!