Community Answer 1
Adult paper wasps either drink nectar or catch caterpillars and drink the caterpillar's blood, or hemolymph. Then the adult wasp flies back to the nest and regurgitates (throws up) the nectar or blood into the mouths of young (larval) wasps or other adult wasps. After the young wasps are full, they produce a saliva (or spit) which is fifty times more nutritious than nectar. The adult wasps drink this saliva from the mouths of the young wasps.
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Community Answer 2
Wasps eat other living bugs like, ants, flies and caterpillars, if their able to catch with fast reflexes they will eat butterflies. They will also make honey with pollen and they will eat the honey afterwards.
bees, fruit,
Hornets eat eat flies, bees, and wasps.
Wasps are useful to the food chain. Wasps eat caterpillars and other insects that destroy crops, as well as pollinate flowers and other plants.
they eat bugs such as"wasps,roaches,beetles,andso on"
Yes Chickens will chase and eat almost any flying insect. They very seldom get stung either. The chicken usually will strike at the wasp and knock it down, as it crawls away it will kill and eat it. Chickens are omnivores and will try to eat anything especially if it moves.
Gall wasps are also known as gallflies. Animals that eat them often include other wasps, as they penetrate the gallfly's gall and consume the larvae within.
If you eat figs, you are consuming wasps, some do not make it out of the fig and die inside. You are not guaranteed to be eating wasps.
wasps are carnivours so its possible
Wasps eat when they are hungary.
Dragonflies will not eat wasps or hornets unless there is absolutely nothing else for them to eat. They mostly eat mosquitoes but will also eat butterflies and moths.
they eat fruit
Some wasps kill and eat bugs that are harmful to people.
insects
prayingmantises
faces
Yes
Wasps eat some smaller insects, which can attack flowers and plants. As a result they are a positive influence in a garden.
Many insects can eat wasps, including dragonflies, moths, and beetles. Larger wasps, which belong to the order Hymenoptera, can also feed on other smaller wasps.