Animal Coloration: An Account of the Principal Facts and Theories Relating to the Colors and Markings of Animals. Written by Frank E. Beddard. 1895.
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Animal Coloration: An Account of the Principal Facts and Theories Relating to the Colors and Markings of Animals. Written by Frank E. Beddard. 1895.
Internet Archive
Common Wasp/vanlig geting. Värmland, Sweden (September 3, 2016).
Common wasp, Vespa vulgaris, on a delicious looking apple
Surrey, UK, June 2025
Wonder Common Wasps
The common wasp, Vespula vulgaris is a species of wasp that is native throughout Europe and Asia, and has been introduced in New Zealand, Australia, and South America. These wasps thrive in a variety of environments, from deciduous forests to meadows to urban parks and gardens; the primary requirements are an abundant source of food and at least several months where the temperature is above 2 °C (36 °F) which allows them to forage. Nests can be found in tree hollows, crevices, wall cavities, or any other enclosed space.
Vespula vulgaris has a highly varied diet. As larvae, they are fed pre-chewed caterpillars, flies, spiders, and bees. Adults consume more sugary foods like nectar, fruits, and honey. They find these foods through their extremely sensitive sense of smell; the common wasp is capable of detecting minute particles of food via their antennae, and once a source of food is found the individual will return to the hive to recruit others by drumming their abdomen against the side of the nest.
Like other hymenoptrids, the common wasp is a eusocial species; each nests consists of workers under the direction of a single queen. When a queen first begins her colony, she does most of the work building the nest from chewed wood fibre and laying eggs that produce sterile female workers. As the colony grows, reaching up to 5,000 individuals, the queen begins to produce both female and male workers, each of which performs a specific task for the hive; foraging, caring for the eggs and larvae, feeding the queen, or repairing the nest. These workers are directed by pheromones released by the queen, which is delivered both by air and when workers lick the queen to clean her.
The queen begins laying eggs at the start of summer, in May. Larvae emerge about 5 days later, and spend the next 20-25 days being fed by the queen until they reach full size, at which time they spin a mucus-based cover over their cell and emerge as a mature worker. This cycle continues throughout the summer and early fall, with larger individuals emerging later in the season. A larva's place in the hive also determines its size; the largest larvae, which becomes the queen, is located at the bottom of the nest closest to the entrance. Multiple queens typically hatch in a season, but most leave the nest to start their own colonies. Towards the end of the summer, the queen mates with multiple males and then enters a state of hibernation until the following spring thaw; meanwhile, the workers either starve or are killed by the cold.
Workers and queens are fairly similar in appearance; both sport yellow and black markings across their thorax and abdomen to warn away potential predators. The primary difference is that queens are larger, at 20 mm (0.8 in) long, while workers are only 12–17 mm (0.5–0.7 in). Only female workers have stingers. The species is commonly confused with the European wasp, Vespula germanica, as the two look remarkably similar; the best identifier is that V. vulgaris has only one black mark on its head, while V. germanica has three.
Conservation status: This species has a large, stable population and is considered Least Concern by the IUCN. However, in areas where it has been introduced, it is considered invasive due to predation and competition with native species.
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Photos
Andy Sands
Mike Snell
Dennis Maraisis via iNaturalist
Common wasp (Vespula vulgaris)
Photo by Rolf Nagel
Well, the wasp was there again this morning, ...and you can see from these photos how much work she'd done since yesterday. I really hate removing these but it was right by the door of the visitor info hut. I waited till she had disappeared off to forage and then removed the nest. She looked rather forlorn when she returned :(
Hopefully she'll get to work quickly elsewhere and have a productive summer. In the mean time, a chance to study nature's baffling complexity.
i don't give a fuck if you ship bumbleby or not
not everyone can identify with the characters, or maybe even already ship them with someone else, or maybe they just can't vibe on it. i don't care if you don't ship bumbleby. i do care, however, if you go out of your way making half-assed excuses to tear down something genuinely beautiful people inside and out haven't had such clean cut, thought out representation on before. if you see such a beautiful community fawning over this fucking sweet ass ship, and your first thought is to throw out these shitty excuses while you'd never say ANYTHING about a straight couple doing the thinks bumbleby did instead of simply admitting you're a homophobic shithead, i do not respect you. and i'm not going to sit here and watch you do that kind of crap, because it's gone way too far. that makes me a wasp, right? not respecting people who disrespect something i adore, and can share with other people. i'm not allowed to have that, or i'm a wasp? it sure is a good thing crwby is showing the world that i AM allowed to enjoy this ship, and keep on finding other people as passionate about it as i am.
Ivy and the Wasp
Photo credit: Eleanor Chua.
A Common Wasp (Vespula vulgaris) feeding frantically on Ivy flowers (Hedera helix) even as its days are numbered with the approaching winter.