Welcome to Wasp of the Week! In this series, I hope to perhaps change people’s perspective on the weird and wonderful variety of wasps we have here in the UK.
To start this series I will discuss the wasps that most people are familiar with, those of the social wasps, the black and yellow picnic bothering wasps and hopefully answer the question many people ask, which is “What is the point of wasps?” In the British Isles, we currently have eight species of social wasp and one species of cuckoo wasp in the subfamily Vespinae, and these are the wasps I will be talking about today. They can be inquisitive, defensive and downright nowty at certain times of the year but they are an extremely important part of the ecosystem and without wasps, our lives during the warmer months would be a lot less pleasant and we would no doubt need a lot more pesticides to enjoy growing food.
Let me explain. Social wasps follow an annual cycle in the British Isles, each spring the queens that mated the previous year emerge from their overwintering sites and begin to look for a suitable, safe place to start their nest. She does all of the foundation work alone, creating a small, golf ball-sized embryo nest where she will lay the female eggs that will become her first workers. It is a perilous time for our queen wasp. She needs to hunt for small insects to feed her carnivorous brood, keeping herself strong while creating her small, but perfect nest by rasping rotten or weathered wood, mixing with saliva to create the paper, while making sure her brood doesn’t chill and fail. She may abandon an early nest if it proves not to be as safe as she first thought, too much disturbance or she may be predated herself. A lot of work for one small insect!