Bald Faced Hornet
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Dolichovespula maculata ![]() ![]()
Behavior –
Bald-faced hornets are not true hornets at all; they are aerial
yellow jackets. This hornet constructs paper nests made from wood
harvested from logs and trees. The nest of the bald-faced hornet
will take on a football shape, growing larger with time. Some nests
may measure up to two feet in length and contain hundreds of worker
wasps. The nests last one year. Each year in the fall, a hornet nest
produces numerous queens that fly out to find a protected site
(e.g., under loose bark) to over winter. The following spring, each
queen finds a suitable site in a tree or shrub to begin constructing
her nest. She forms a small paper nest inside in which she builds a
paper "comb" and raises her first brood of larvae. The workers that
emerge from that brood begin foraging for food, enlarging the nest,
caring for the young and defending the colony.
voids of buildings as does its close cousin, the yellow jacket. |