The Wasp reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004
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Wasp

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Wasps
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Aleiodes indiscretus wasp
parasitizing gypsy moth caterpillar.
Scientific classification
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Arthropoda
Class:Insecta
Order:Hymenoptera
Suborder:Symphyta
Suborder:Apocrita

A wasp is any insect of the order Hymenoptera and Suborder Apocrita that is not a bee or an ant. Less familiar, the Suborder Symphyta includes the sawflies and wood wasps, which differ from the Apocrita by having a broad connection between the thorax and abdomen. Also, Symphyta larvae are mostly herbivorous and "caterpillarlike", whereas the Apocrita are largely predatory or parasitic.

Polistes wasp building nest in CaliforniaEnlarge

Polistes wasp building nest in California

Most familiar wasps belong to the Aculeata, a division of the Apocrita whose ovipositors are modified into a venomous stinger that includes ants and bees. In this sense, the species called "velvet ants" (Mutilidae) are actually wasps.

A narrower meaning of the term wasp is any member of the Aculeate Family Vespidae. This includes the yellowjackets (Vespula, Dolichovespula spp.) and hornets (Vespa spp.).

Table of contents
1 Characteristics
2 Some Wasp Families
3 External links

Characteristics

The following characteristics are present in most wasps:

Wasps are critically important in natural biocontrol. There is a wasp species that is predator or parasite upon almost every pest insect species. Wasps are also increasingly used in agricultural pest control.

See also: how to tell bees from wasps, Mud dauber

Some Wasp Families

A yellowjacket wasp drinkingEnlarge

A yellowjacket wasp drinking

External links


The term sea wasp designates a number of species of jellyfish, including the deadly box jellyfish.


See also: WASP (White Anglo-Saxon Protestant), and W.A.S.P, a 1980s heavy metal band