Saturday 5 September 2020

Wasps : Friend or Foe !

Like them or loathe them, and I don't think many of us do like them, wasps seem to become so annoying at the end of summer - have you ever wondered why?

Seirian Sumner is Professor of Behavioural Ecology at University College London, and she has recently written an article titled 'Why wasps become so annoying at the end of summer' which I now share with you.

"The sausages are sizzling, the burgers browned, and the beer is cold. You’re all set for the perfect end-of-summer BBQ. Alfresco dining, drinks in a garden of a country pub, ice-creams – we grasp at the last shreds of summer, precious times with loved ones before an uncertain winter of local lockdowns and Zoom.

And then an unwanted visitor arrives.

Jazzily dressed, trim-waisted, your uninvited guest is brimming with confidence. She’s carefree and cocky – anyone’s sweet drink is hers for the taking. If you stand in her way or brush her aside, you’ll find she’s got a nasty surprise in her stripy derriere.

As the end of the summer approaches, so does wasp season, when these hated insects start to bother us at our picnics and beer gardens. It happens every year, without fail, and feels especially rude at a time when we’re counting the few days we have left for outdoor, coronavirus-friendly socialising.

There are no silver linings to a pandemic-gripped world. But one thing it has perhaps given us is a word to explain the late-summer antisocial behaviour of wasps: furlough. And as someone who spends their time researching wasps, a word to excuse their bad behaviour is pretty exciting. If you are one of the many people furloughed right now, you are especially well placed to understand the late-summer wasps.


furloughed wasp’s playground, photo credit Jay Si

Worker wasps
Despite appearances, wasps only tend to upset your outdoor life at the end of the summer. There is, in fact, plenty of wasp action throughout the summer, but you are not interesting enough for them to bother with at that time. It is very likely that the wasp you swatted at your BBQ last weekend has spent the summer removing caterpillars from your vegetable patch, or aphids from your tomatoes.

That wasp was part of mother nature’s team of pest controllers: without wasps, we would need to use a lot more pesticide to keep our lettuces whole and tomatoes aphid-free. Wasps are good; they are natural enemies of other (even peskier) insects.

To that hard-working mid-summer wasp, your prosecco luncheons and BBQ beers were a bore, because what she was after was protein. She is a hunter, a worker. In mid-summer, her purpose is to provide her baby siblings with protein. She is a sterile cog in a big superorganismal machine, driven by evolution to pass on her genes by raising siblings. Usually, the protein she hunts is other insects (garden caterpillars or flies). She brings prey to the colony where there are thousands of baby siblings to feed.

She might chew the prey up a little (and perhaps ingest some too) before feeding it directly to a larva, but the bulk of the protein goes to the babies. In return for her hard work, the larva will give her a carbohydrate-rich sugary secretion. This is thought to be the main mode of nutrition for adult worker wasps. Each colony will produce several thousand worker wasps and they are kept very busy for much of the summer feeding these brood; with the drive of a drug addict, they are hooked on the sugary secretions from the lips of their baby siblings.


Summer leave
As summer progresses, the colony grows into a citadel with up to 10,000 workers; concurrent with this growth in worker numbers is brood pupation. When a larva is fully fed (at about two weeks of age), it is ready to metamorphose into a beautiful adult wasp. It will spin its own pupal cap and it no longer needs the care of its adult siblings.

Not all brood pupate at once; there are still many larvae left to feed. But the ratio of workers to larvae shifts, and as summer tips into autumn, this ratio shifts further, leaving more and more workers under-employed and – importantly – without their sibling-administered sugar fix. They have, in effect, been furloughed. And like furloughed humans, their behaviour changes accordingly.

Now they look for sugar away from the colony – often at your picnics. In the absence of those easy sugary feasts, they visit flowers: pollinating, just like bees. In fact, wasps can be as effective at pollination as some bees. In evolutionary terms, your picnic is a relatively novel distraction.

Such behavioural shifts arise in response to the needs of their society; shifting demands are perceived by individual workers and result in changes in how genes are expressed in their brains. Inside these insect brains lie some clues about how helping behaviour evolves and what the molecular machinery is behind it.


A wasp pollinating, photo credit Paul Reeves

Inside wasp brains
My team is researching the molecular machinery underpinning the behaviour of these wasps to understand how and why social traits evolve. The worker wasps you see at your picnic are part of one of the most complex biological products of evolution found in the natural world: a superorganismal colony.

Just like a honeybee hive, each colony is headed by a single mother queen who lays all the eggs; her early season offspring are the sterile workers who help raise more brood and eventually rear the “sexuals” (males and next year’s queens). The queen, workers and sexuals all look and behave very differently, so much so that you might mistake them for different species. They depend on each other as different components of the superorganismal “machine”. What is extraordinary is that they are all produced from the same building blocks – they have a shared genome. This is possible because genes are expressed differently.

Understanding how genomes evolve to produce such contrasting but integrated components of a superorganism remains one of the big outstanding questions in evolutionary biology. That wasp at your picnic is a highly honed product of evolution with an important role in a society that outstrips our own in complexity and coordination.

No one likes their picnic plagued with wasps, but with some understanding of the biology behind their behaviour, everyone can adapt to respect them. The pandemic has forced changes in our own behaviour and we have adapted. If there are any silver linings to the challenges we currently face, perhaps one is that we can empathise a bit more with these misunderstood and important insects."

Words/pictures and more from original article here

Now if you may have a picnic or late summer BBQ planned, I hope you find it wasp free, and if you should be looking for lower carb burger recipes, have a look here and here


You will find a variety of articles and recipe ideas within this blog, but not all may be suitable for you. If you may have any food allergies, or underlying health issues these must always be taken into account. If you are a diabetic and not sure how certain foods may affect your blood sugars, test is best, i.e. use your meter.

All the best Jan

41 comments:

  1. ...one day recently a nest of them interrupted my day!

    ReplyDelete
  2. We have wasps here on the patio -several kinds- but have never been bothered by them. I try to think of them as pollinators ;)

    ReplyDelete
  3. What an interesting study being conducted. I learned a lot about the wasp brain. The only thing I've ever been told is, they build their nests in a different location each year. That seems to be true based on my experiences with them.

    ReplyDelete
  4. They are nasty and siting without provocation

    ReplyDelete
  5. I must admit that I'm not a fan of wasps but I suppose they have their place in the world.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I give them a wide berth and try to stay out of their way..I did not know half of those facts about wasp behavior...so Thanks!

    ReplyDelete
  7. I love Wasps, everyone should love them Jan'

    ReplyDelete
  8. Interesting article, thanks for sharing! Valerie

    ReplyDelete
  9. I have a bee phobia so anything bee, wasp, hornet, ect is counted in that phobia. As long as they stay away from me they're fine.

    ReplyDelete
  10. What a fun article for some reason this year we have had very few wasps.

    Hugs Diane

    ReplyDelete
  11. Thankfully we don't have too many wasps here, only a few and we can handle that. We are actually quite fascinated observing them how they cut off a piece of food and then transport them away. Yes, I would prefer to eat outside without them, but they are also kind of entertaining.

    ReplyDelete
  12. I admire the wasps and the work they do but I keep my distance. :)

    ReplyDelete
  13. What a fascinating article.
    Many thanks. We have very few wasps here.

    ReplyDelete
  14. Not a fan of wasps, but this is really interesting!

    ReplyDelete
  15. Oh my gosh, this is such an awesome post. I couldnt stop reading once I started. And I always thought, like bees, the worker wasps would be all males. Now I am not even sure about the bees. These girls work hard and long hours, and they deserve a little sugar at the end of their shift. Thanks for posting this. I love learning new things about nature. Happy long weekend. Put a little dish of sugar water out for the wasps.

    ReplyDelete
  16. We have many right now and I've seen them on the goldenrod and boneset flowers too.

    ReplyDelete
  17. Interesting to read!! I got stung by a wasp this year!!

    ReplyDelete
  18. Usual this time of year they seem be quite a few yellow jackets and such. Lot less this year.

    ReplyDelete
  19. Interesting read.
    We also have wasps which were introduced and now they are a nuisance.
    Fortunately for us we didn't see but one last summer.

    ReplyDelete
  20. Thank you for that very detailed "life of a wasp". It is a shame that we humans kill so many wasps when all they want is our sugar. When we go to Greece in two weeks we expect to be pestered by them just before dusk when they become super hungry. The local waiters have a great and super fast technique for swatting them. Or, just put a little sugary snack out for them and in theory they leave our baklava and ice cream alone.

    ReplyDelete
  21. Hello.
    Interesting post. Thank you.
    Take care.

    ReplyDelete
  22. I saw one... one! bee this year. No wasp, nothing. Frightening.
    Not that I´m a fan at all, but they belong, right.

    ReplyDelete
  23. Very interesting, I'm afraid of insects, though! Love these pictures, have a lovely day!

    ReplyDelete
  24. Great info and post.
    If the wasp do not bother me, I will not bother them.

    Take care, enjoy your day! Have a happy new week ahead!

    ReplyDelete
  25. I can't say wasps are my favorite but the article is intriguing. Thanks, Jan.

    ReplyDelete
  26. Very informative...I'm OK with wasps if they leave me alone..Happy weekend..

    ReplyDelete
  27. Great article info ~ will never look at a wasp in the same way again ~ ^_^

    Live each moment with love,

    A ShutterBug Explores,
    aka (A Creative Harbor)

    ReplyDelete
  28. What a very interesting article. We all love bees yet hate wasps, don't we. We have a few fruit trees so get drunk bees at the end of Summer when the fruit ferments - not fun! xx

    ReplyDelete
  29. Everything has its job in this world. Love the article.

    ReplyDelete
  30. This is fascinating. And yes, there have been plenty of wasps lately, especially at my hummingbird feeder. Happy new week.

    ReplyDelete
  31. i enjoyed knowing about little thing dear Jan

    unlike you here in southern part of Pakistan winters are outdoor season instead of summers ,and our companion during picnics are mostly ants of some kind though our time between both seasons is suitable for flying insects
    thank you for sharing
    more blessings to your world :)

    ReplyDelete
  32. A very interesting article, Jan. We usually have one or two pesky wasps about when we eat outdoors.

    ReplyDelete
  33. We had a picnic on Saturday out on our deck and can you believe that we were bombarded with flies, as I was reading I thought this could be our picnic if it was talking about flies, so funny as we didn't notice a one until we sat down to eat and all of a sudden they were swarming us. This was an interesting read, never thought of it in these terms!

    ReplyDelete
  34. Excellent article. Wasps are fascinating creatures.

    One year i was on an archeology dig in Poland, it was a very hot summer and the wasps gathered in the campsite, attracted to the jam and other sweet things we ate. In the evenings we were sometimes literally surrounded by wasps, they'd even be crawling over our food. This perhaps sounds terrifying, but, in the whole two weeks of wasps, only one person got stung.

    ReplyDelete
  35. Great article and I am happy you shared this on your blog. I learned about the benefits of wasps when I took my Master Gardener class. They truly are one of mother natures pest control team-members. :-)

    ReplyDelete
  36. this was a great read on wasps!! friends and definitely necessary!!

    ReplyDelete
  37. I'm always sorry for the wasps at this time of the year, the poor things are aimless and waiting to die. What a wonderful post.xxx

    ReplyDelete
  38. Hay bastantes avispas por aquí, no me gusta molestarlas. Besos.

    ReplyDelete
  39. The recipes look very good. I will copy them and try them. Trying to get my Type 2 Diabetes levels lowered.

    Thank you
    Christine

    ReplyDelete

The lowcarb team value your comments. Thank you for taking the time to contribute to our blog. Please note! negative comments and insults from anonymous idiots, with nothing to add to the debate will not be authorised. However, we welcome constructive criticism.

The best of health to you and yours.

Eddie