True Facts: Parasitoid Wasps

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  • Опубликовано: 25 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 2,1 тыс.

  • @zefrank
    @zefrank  25 дней назад +222

    Go to ground.news/ZeFrank to save 50% on the Ground News unlimited access Vantage plan and discover the full spectrum of truths and absurdities behind today’s headlines.

    • @Fralexion
      @Fralexion 25 дней назад +21

      I love that the left vs right examples are "well-documented homosexual behavior in animal species" vs "Candace Owens declares herself 'neutral' with regards to what shape the planet might be"

    • @AndreaDingbatt
      @AndreaDingbatt 25 дней назад +3

      @ZeFrank Thank you so very much for sharing your videos and sense of humour!!😅❤

    • @whyjay9959
      @whyjay9959 25 дней назад +1

      Garbage in, garbage out.

    • @MyPalJimbo
      @MyPalJimbo 25 дней назад +5

      Hey, who do we talk to about importing the wasp that kills spotted lanternflies?

    • @_Stormfather
      @_Stormfather 25 дней назад +1

      @@Fralexion thanks for demonstrating that you're the kind of person who needs Ground News. Good advertising.

  • @LerrisGaliron
    @LerrisGaliron 25 дней назад +1574

    "...There's a wasp for that." is such a great slogan.

    • @Prismaticlysm
      @Prismaticlysm 24 дня назад +22

      It needs to be a Ze Frank tshirt!

    • @SolstaceWinters
      @SolstaceWinters 24 дня назад +10

      @@Prismaticlysm That's 1000% shirt potential.

    • @Piratskeppet
      @Piratskeppet 23 дня назад +10

      You could make a religion out of this

    • @TheRealNormanBates
      @TheRealNormanBates 23 дня назад +7

      so a "White Anglo Saxon Parasite"? Can we get a T-shirt depicting wasps in Victorian clothing? And would Nolan be into them?

    • @devonmmi
      @devonmmi 23 дня назад

      it's like the old apple slogan

  • @a.m.8722
    @a.m.8722 25 дней назад +2596

    Ah yes. Nothing more Halloween than a parasite invading you the worst way possible

    • @LyaksandraB
      @LyaksandraB 25 дней назад +59

      And then also uninvading you in the wors way possible. I mean, eating you from the ass all the way to and through your head? Fu...

    • @joshuadearwester268
      @joshuadearwester268 25 дней назад +18

      Just watched Alien Romulus lol

    • @MarshallMoonshine-iv4ui
      @MarshallMoonshine-iv4ui 25 дней назад +31

      Remember: every person’s fear is somebody else’s fetish.

    • @DARKthenoble
      @DARKthenoble 25 дней назад +22

      And then there is a wasp larva eating on that wasp larva while another is also consuming that wasp larva.

    • @lesewing
      @lesewing 25 дней назад +10

      @@DARKthenoble Good old Hyper parasites

  • @EianJolin
    @EianJolin 25 дней назад +2003

    "mummy can we keep it?"
    "oh dont worry we are gonna keep it" so devilish

    • @plaza3825
      @plaza3825 25 дней назад +46

      That was so foul 😫

    • @TragoudistrosMPH
      @TragoudistrosMPH 25 дней назад +63

      On a deeplook vid about potted wasps that store living caterpillars in pots they make, someone commented:
      Caterpillar: what a lovely jar you made!
      Wasp: I'm glad you like it. It's for you.

    • @tessat338
      @tessat338 24 дня назад +6

      Ooooh! That's my friend from university's research and I think that it is his film! He's cited in the credits, Prof. Ken Catania at Vanderbilt University. In his book, "Great Adaptations," Ken has a chapter on parasitoid wasps. It's a terrific book, but the Audible narrator isn't great and steps on all of the jokes. Get it in paper form or as an E-book.

    • @fariesz6786
      @fariesz6786 23 дня назад

      wish more parents had that attitude wuewuewue

    • @ravenhurst96
      @ravenhurst96 12 дней назад +2

      The delivery of that honestly had me laughing for a few minutes. 😂

  • @PabloFinollo
    @PabloFinollo 25 дней назад +307

    Wasp: "Instead of building the house, let the trees build the house!"
    I must admit, that's genius.

    • @mrboosh506
      @mrboosh506 19 дней назад +5

      It comes from the trees, so let the trees make the houses

    • @dudebro7698
      @dudebro7698 19 дней назад +3

      Let the trees build the house. I pay the Homer tax!

    • @williansnobre
      @williansnobre 17 дней назад +4

      Growing homes is a new field of research actually that might make some cool stuff in the future.
      Right now there's mycelium bricks and walls of mycelium but they can only grow in shapes already put in place, it would be really useful to be able to just grow a large structure. The wasps seem to be ahead of us in that area.

    • @EverydayNormieMadafacka
      @EverydayNormieMadafacka 12 дней назад +5

      basically an elf roleplay

    • @AndyDrake-FOOKYT
      @AndyDrake-FOOKYT 10 дней назад

      I always wanted to nowaki a house...but I'm lazy...just a whimsical idea.

  • @TheDonutMan3000
    @TheDonutMan3000 25 дней назад +521

    Videos like this make you really appreciate the fact that we basically retired from the food chain and now rule it like a 40k emperor, but with more death, somehow.

    • @Nephilimfields
      @Nephilimfields 22 дня назад +45

      There's probably a wasp for that... 0.o *shudder*

    • @16SKB
      @16SKB 21 день назад +15

      @@Nephilimfields Indeed. They're called Psychneuein

    • @TheDonutMan3000
      @TheDonutMan3000 20 дней назад +3

      @@16SKB good thing we have no psychic abilities (we know of)

    • @anothenblue2630
      @anothenblue2630 20 дней назад +7

      And then we decided to explore areas where we never were a part of the food chain and the locals have no reason to treat us as anything more than a weird, but vital snack that might be all they'll eat for the next month. Same areas are also completely uninhabitable for us without excessive amounts of preparation, but we went there anyway.

    • @FischerNilsA
      @FischerNilsA 20 дней назад

      Not really retired.
      We hide out from them in human-only biurrows and killed most that can eat us - but go tigerwatching in the south indian jungle or meet a jaguire at night in central america and your are still very much on the menue.
      Also - once we dont use it anymore, many of our siblings in the tree of life still love themselves a nice ape corpse to eat of, from cadaver flies to coffin beetles.

  • @vincei4252
    @vincei4252 25 дней назад +3917

    Multiple new fears unlocked.

    • @raydark8007
      @raydark8007 25 дней назад +34

      yup D:

    • @coletrainhetrick
      @coletrainhetrick 25 дней назад +78

      No kidding, this is some crazy nature shit.

    • @Guydude777
      @Guydude777 25 дней назад +70

      The perfect Halloween video.

    • @thatman666
      @thatman666 25 дней назад +50

      As if wasps weren’t evil already.

    • @AndreaDingbatt
      @AndreaDingbatt 25 дней назад +23

      How about the parasitic Fungi?! 😮
      Zombie apocalypse anyone?!😅

  • @goobermcnoober8140
    @goobermcnoober8140 25 дней назад +1783

    Parasitizing parasites is such a bizarre ecological niche, it’s simultaneously baffling and impressive that it’s filled by so many species. Life truly does find a way.

    • @Hermititis
      @Hermititis 25 дней назад +64

      Hyperparasites are fascinating

    • @iapetusmccool
      @iapetusmccool 25 дней назад +81

      _Great fleas have little fleas upon their backs to bite 'em,_
      _And little fleas have lesser fleas, and so ad infinitum._
      _And the great fleas themselves, in turn, have greater fleas to go on;_
      _While these again have greater still, and greater still, and so on._
      - Augustus De Morgan, _Siphonaptera,_ 1872.

    • @TabathaTMartin
      @TabathaTMartin 25 дней назад +27

      They are like real life Xenomorphs i swear

    • @CrypticCocktails
      @CrypticCocktails 25 дней назад

      I'm fully scientifically-minded, but this stuff really makes me think we have an evil code developer in the sky making stuff up for pure terror reasons

    • @stenthesnake98
      @stenthesnake98 25 дней назад +27

      It’s staggering how many we know, and even more that we don’t know! Same thing with mites, there are a handful that we interact with in day to day life but then there are so many that aren’t even known to science-not because they aren’t common but they are understudied

  • @Maximus-n7v
    @Maximus-n7v 25 дней назад +954

    I work in a plant nursery where we use a lot of these wasps against Aphids. Almost every time I spot some Aphids on a plant, there are parasitoid wasps nearby, and often times I'll see the larva of the wasps wiggling their way outside of an Aphid, leaving just the shell. This method isn't perfect but already reduces the use of harmfull chemicals by a long shot!

    • @stompthedragon4010
      @stompthedragon4010 25 дней назад +35

      Saybwhat you will, Im not inviting the wasps.

    • @no-lifenoah7861
      @no-lifenoah7861 25 дней назад +16

      I’d honestly prefer the chemicals. This shit is horrifying.

    • @toni5431
      @toni5431 25 дней назад +41

      Whatever happened to using ladybirds. They love aphids too and I'd much rather spot a ladybug on my plant than a parasitic wasp!

    • @Pilvenuga
      @Pilvenuga 24 дня назад +16

      why not just use ladybugs? they devour the aphids a la final solution
      i used them a lot in the past, never had to use pesticides after the sprouting season
      while the aphids still did do damage to plants during leafing, it wasnt crippling to the plants
      plus, the kids love ladybugs.

    • @mastermarkus5307
      @mastermarkus5307 24 дня назад +30

      As someone who keeps a lot of plants, hearing about one injecting it's babies into a mealybug gave me a greater appreciation for these wasps pretty early in the video.

  • @alananderson1615
    @alananderson1615 25 дней назад +89

    Theres a wasp for that is super true. People like to talk about how many beatles there are but the under studded reality is that for every beatle there are 3 layers of parasitic wasps eating them and each other.

    • @Playlist4Ella
      @Playlist4Ella 18 дней назад +3

      I thought there were only 4 beatles.

    • @Spoofysparfyskels
      @Spoofysparfyskels 17 дней назад +3

      @@Playlist4EllaI had to Google how many members of the Beatles there were so I could make another joke and by the time I finished I realized I was the joke

  • @ApetureTestSubject
    @ApetureTestSubject 25 дней назад +85

    I knew parasitic wasps were a thing, but zombifying virus parasitoid wasps was news to me!
    But those micro-wasps are amazing! A little bug so small it makes a regular butterfly look like Mothra!

  • @QuixoteBadger
    @QuixoteBadger 25 дней назад +730

    More so than any of the freaky stuff, the thing that surprised me the most is learning that microscopic wasps are a thing, and that you can just buy parasitoid wasps to get rid of pest bugs. I was genuinely not expecting to learn cool stuff on halloween.

    • @TheWhiteleather
      @TheWhiteleather 23 дня назад +29

      IKR! That wasp sneaking up on a fruit fly....I mean have you seen the size of a fruit fly in real life?

    • @cristhian4012
      @cristhian4012 23 дня назад +23

      Right?.
      I was like "😮😮" when he said that some wasps are microscopic like amoebas

    • @doughboy_6439
      @doughboy_6439 22 дня назад

      ​@@cristhian4012 you may or may not want to look up malaria and Chagas disease, both blood borne parasites.

    • @lordfelidae4505
      @lordfelidae4505 15 дней назад

      ​@@cristhian4012 to be fair, 'microscopic' can get really big. Look up stentors. You can see them with the naked eye.

    • @greencanner4284
      @greencanner4284 13 дней назад +4

      I had to look it up, but there's tons of companies that sell trichogramma eggs for things like moth and caterpillar control, it's crazy

  • @attabooii
    @attabooii 25 дней назад +1617

    I love parasitoid wasps! Currently doing my PhD on them. Fun fact, Darwin (once a clergyman) after seeing parasitoid wasps said “I cannot persuade myself that a beneficent and omnipotent God would have designedly created the Ichneumonidae [a family of parasitoid wasps] with the express intention of their feeding within the living bodies of caterpillars.”
    So parasitoid wasps made Darwin doubt the existence of a benevolent god lmao

    • @Common_Houseplant
      @Common_Houseplant 25 дней назад +57

      How do you even get into a specialization like that? Genuinely curious!

    • @seancallaway5204
      @seancallaway5204 25 дней назад +187

      Darwin: "Gross!"
      Also Darwin: "Fascinating..."

    • @DeAndering-bf1kk
      @DeAndering-bf1kk 25 дней назад +75

      They are beautiful animals. Look at them and their colors. We humans, always looking for extraterrestrial life while all the aliens are already here. We just have to study them better. That’s one explanation for you.

    • @iainwalker8615
      @iainwalker8615 25 дней назад +48

      I love them too. I even created a subreddit for them where I was posting photos but obviously there wasn’t enough people interested in them to actually start a community there. It’s also fairly easy to make a novel discovery of a parasitoid wasp species compared to some other kinds of insects which is cool. The only problem is that because they’re so diverse and have little taxonomic research being done on them compared to other insects it’s very hard to identify the species if you’re self-taught

    • @13thMaiden
      @13thMaiden 25 дней назад +19

      Question, are their any specific wasps that parasitize hornworms or squash beetles? I'd love to sick my reptiles on them but they're just too poisonous for them.

  • @RickJohnson
    @RickJohnson 25 дней назад +482

    "What's even better is that the bebbes are vegetarians! _hippies_ " 🤣🤣

    • @seanA416
      @seanA416 25 дней назад +26

      His delivery is so good

  • @Demonia105
    @Demonia105 25 дней назад +86

    Yeah... Yeah, you definitely chose the perfect day to upload this. On one hand, fascinating. On the other, knowing there's wasps smaller than amoeba and how many more of them are out there than we perceive is terrifying

    • @rynther
      @rynther 10 дней назад

      The amoeba sized ones are new to me, but if you're paying attention outside, you'll see micro wasps around fairly often, but they're easy to confuse with small mosquitos and gnats. Hey, if you plan to catch any, keep in mind they can have a painful sting. Most of the time though, they just do their thing and nobody notices. Look on the bright side, without micro wasps, there would be no figs.

  • @bt9565
    @bt9565 24 дня назад +60

    I didn’t learn anything new in this video, I love parasitic wasps. But it’s so, so awesome to actually SEE the things you read about, in high definition video!!
    I think that’s part of what makes this channel so great- you fill a niche for obscure crazy facts for normal people, awesome footage for people in the know, and humor for everyone

  • @suee434
    @suee434 25 дней назад +526

    "There's a wasp for everything" would make a great slogan!

  • @TankyCrobat
    @TankyCrobat 25 дней назад +202

    the process of parasitic wasps is both fascinating and also the most nightmarish of nightmares I will ever have

  • @LibreImpacto
    @LibreImpacto 25 дней назад +721

    Zombie wasps for Halloween? You DO love me!

  • @sirsage3311
    @sirsage3311 25 дней назад +49

    1:21 The gall of these wasps!

  • @OceanSwimmer
    @OceanSwimmer 24 дня назад +11

    Thank you, Ze.
    Your work not only educates me -- I share these with my grandchildren (via their mom & dad for parental approval).
    The songs are especially appreciated.... I listen to them repeatedly.
    🎶💕

  • @iainwalker8615
    @iainwalker8615 25 дней назад +237

    I really like parasitoid wasps. I even made a parasitoid wasp subreddit last year to post photos but unfortunately I was the only person who ever really used it. Parasitoid wasps are really fascinating insects that are usually either forgotten about or dismissed as bad pests because of their brutal life cycle but they’re actually very ecologically important as they help cull the populations of other insects that would take over if it wasn’t for predators like these. They also cannot and will not sting you so you’re completely safe around them.

    • @alterego3734
      @alterego3734 25 дней назад +6

      What is the name of the sub?

    • @iainwalker8615
      @iainwalker8615 25 дней назад +33

      r/parasitoidwasps

    • @kevincrady2831
      @kevincrady2831 25 дней назад +30

      As long as evolution never tells them, "You know, a human body could host a _hell_ of a lot of wasp babies..." 😬

    • @iainwalker8615
      @iainwalker8615 25 дней назад +44

      @@kevincrady2831 Virtually every species of parasitoid wasp evolved alongside invertebrates to specialize in parasitizing specific types of invertebrates. There isn’t any know kind of wasp that parasitizes mammals or any other kind of vertebrate so it would probably take at least tens of millions of years before they’ve evolved to parasitize mammals even though they probably will never evolve to do that because it should be so much easier for them to find and infect invertebrate hosts as they far outnumber vertebrate hosts and the invertebrate hosts often live alongside the parasitoid wasps is things like rotting wood.
      TLDR: Parasitoid wasps specialize in parasitizing other invertebrates and cannot parasitize any kind of mammal so will likely never be able to infect humans.

    • @goodun2974
      @goodun2974 24 дня назад

      ​@@kevincrady2831, check out the Danish TV series "Fortitude".....

  • @Man-Corgi
    @Man-Corgi 25 дней назад +262

    Someone in my local insect identification group posted that they had found a bunch of crab spiders buried in their garden. Someone pointed out they likely accidentally dug up some wasp baby's dinner

    • @tomarmadiyer2698
      @tomarmadiyer2698 25 дней назад +12

      Crab spiders are gods favorite wasp snack

    • @chitinskin9860
      @chitinskin9860 25 дней назад +19

      @@tomarmadiyer2698 Specifically flower crab spiders. That's what happens when your bait is also the food source of your biggest predator. Wasp goes there expecting nectar, instead it gets nectar and a kid's meal bonus.

    • @namAehT
      @namAehT 24 дня назад +22

      When we removed some cinder blocks from our backyard, it left a patch of soil that about a dozen parasitic wasps decided to use as a nesting site. It was absolutely fascinating to watch them dig the hole, then come back with a paralyzed bug, and measure the two to make sure it would fit. If the bug was too big, it would widen the hole until it was large enough to accommodate. Then it dragged it into the depths, lay its eggs, and carefully bury the insect. It would even scatter random pebbles and sticks to disguise the hole.
      Fascinating little creatures.

    • @colleenwilliams1689
      @colleenwilliams1689 21 день назад +3

      All this is giving me even more stories to tell people when I try to advocate for native plant gardens. Even just a few plants can host so many insects (I have only 30 square feet of space and saw 5-6 different kinds of bees and wasps alone, plus caterpillars that specialize for living on wild bergamot). It's great to give people more ideas of what to look for in gardens that you can't get with a lawn or nonnative landscaping.

  • @AndrewCheshire
    @AndrewCheshire 25 дней назад +366

    "What you need is a W-A-S-P A-S-A-P." This brilliance is up there with "Koalas in the Rain."

    • @MoultrieGeek
      @MoultrieGeek 25 дней назад +15

      It's close but Koalas ftw.

    • @graciliraptor3990
      @graciliraptor3990 25 дней назад +4

      Super catchy

    • @Pallyk426
      @Pallyk426 25 дней назад +8

      or the classic outro of "mosquito says HELLO"

    • @LethalOwl
      @LethalOwl 24 дня назад +3

      Close, but no cigar.
      Koalas in the Rain is still the best xD

    • @Gemini_Godhand
      @Gemini_Godhand 24 дня назад +5

      Nope! The "Ostritch" and "Puffin" songs had me singing them in real life.

  • @Suchega_Uber
    @Suchega_Uber 25 дней назад +18

    THANK YOU!!! Thank you for bringing up those dark oxygen articles. They tried so fucking hard to sensationalize it. Made me so freaking mad. Disgusting, unethical behavior. We deserve to have our science communicated to us honestly.

    • @Erika-gm2tf
      @Erika-gm2tf 7 дней назад

      Hopefully science will be getting better again now. Aside from Ze Frank, real science has been on hiatus for a few years.

    • @Suchega_Uber
      @Suchega_Uber 7 дней назад

      @@Erika-gm2tf You should stick to gardening, because you sure as shit don't know what the fuck you are talking about. There is a certain manner of speaking that people who are insultingly unqualified to talk about a subject speak with. For instance your use of "real science" is weird, because it implies that out of the many varied disciplines of science, none of them have been real. None of them Erika? Nothing in astronomy, nothing in bioengeneering, nothing in regular engineering, nothing in food sciences, geology, psychotherapy, not even forensic science has done anything real in years, Erika? Computers and phones haven't gotten better in years, Erika? Get tf out of reply section. People becoming like you is why it's unethical to report on science with ambiguity and sensationalism.

    • @Suchega_Uber
      @Suchega_Uber 7 дней назад

      Fucking parasite.

  • @Kristjan0209
    @Kristjan0209 24 дня назад +6

    "You know that problem you have? Well, there is a wasp for that" is a great sales pitch

  • @digitalbookworm5678
    @digitalbookworm5678 25 дней назад +111

    Here in Ohio I once watched a large wasp drag a wolf spider 40 feet across railroad tracks and up an embankment to a groundhog hole. It took about 1 hour and a half.

    • @jr2904
      @jr2904 25 дней назад +22

      I found a poor tarantula in a canyon in California that was already stung by a tarantula hawk wasp. The wasp was slowly dragging it, but like in your story, it was slow progress. I really don't like spiders, but I felt bad for that guy, he just wanted to find a lady.

    • @jdwench
      @jdwench 25 дней назад +13

      That is like a Calvin and Hobbesian time wasting adventure. Sounds like fun

    • @novampires223
      @novampires223 25 дней назад +7

      Your patience impresses me..😊

  • @vivislaboratory
    @vivislaboratory 25 дней назад +61

    If there's one thing I'm sad you left out, it's that parasitoidism is not just the lifestyle of the majority of wasp species, but actually the ancestral lifestyle of all Apocrita - which is the suborder that includes all wasps, ants, and bees! The stingers ALL those insects have originate from modified ovipositors used to lay eggs inside prey, they've just lost the "injecting eggs" functionality in stuff like bees!
    So even that cute bumblebee's ancestors were laying their eggs inside other organisms.

    • @hamsterama
      @hamsterama 23 дня назад

      Wow, that's an interesting fact, I didn't know that! I think parasitic wasps are super cool, especially the species that prey on spiders.

    • @sabinegierth-waniczek4872
      @sabinegierth-waniczek4872 22 дня назад +2

      One of those cute bumblebees flew into my open car window and got caught between my thigh and the car door. I only noticed it when I opened the door and the little &%((&ç"/ rammed its ovipositor into my leg! (TMK bumblebees lay their eggs in rotten wood or other plant based material, AFAIK they are non-parasitoid hymenoptera)
      I barely managed to reach the house door and to get into the flat, because my leg swelled/ swole up (which is correct? non-native English speaker) so fast, that I had to cut my jeans open to get out of it (time elapsed from puncture ca. 3 min at most!), but also felt very sad for the animal, because I adore bumblebees.
      At the time I studied biology and tried to at least determine the species, but was not successful (I had hit it too hard in reflex...),
      At least I was 100% sure it was a female - and that botany would stay my preferred field. Even the tutors were perplexed when I related my experience, like "But bumblebees NEVER sting!" I begged to differ. Ah, the innocent late 1980s...

    • @hamsterama
      @hamsterama 22 дня назад +2

      @@sabinegierth-waniczek4872 To answer your question, "swelled up" is correct. Swell up - swelled up - had/have swollen up. I don't know about European bumblebees, but here in the US, queen bumblebees build their hives in old mouse or rabbit burrows. And yes, bumblebees do sting, but only if you attack their hive, or if you swat at then. Otherwise, they are harmless. I have a lot of flowers in my backyard, so I get a lot of bumblebee visitors. I've never been stung by one. I've been stung by a mason bee, though, when one flew inside my Crocs shoe. But sting didn't hurt too bad, and the bee flew out of my my shoe unharmed.

    • @sabinegierth-waniczek4872
      @sabinegierth-waniczek4872 10 дней назад

      @@hamsterama Thank you for your answer, and for giving solitary hymenoptera a sanctuary in your garden :-))) . Every day is a learning day!
      I felt really sorry that I killed the bumblebee in reflex (I only felt its weight against my skin without seeing it), and it still irks me a good 25 years later. Officially I am NOT allergic to (bumble)bee or wasp things, but better safe than sorry -> I'm happy to see them, but from afar ;-) . Have a great weekend!

    • @hamsterama
      @hamsterama 10 дней назад

      ​@@sabinegierth-waniczek4872 You're welcome! I love bees so much! I have a pollinator garden in my backyard, where I grow flowers just to attract bees. I find it so relaxing to watch them. By the way, don't feel bad about swatting that bumble bee a long time ago. It was an accident! And bumble bees workers live only about a month. So, it's not as if you deprived it from having a very long life.

  • @mcblaggart8565
    @mcblaggart8565 25 дней назад +282

    Well, you say those ovipositors aren't stingers, but really stingers are modified ovipositors. So. . . Kinda sorta, but kind-of sort-of not.

    • @The1nvisibleJeevas
      @The1nvisibleJeevas 25 дней назад +31

      "Yes but actually no"

    • @bugjams
      @bugjams 25 дней назад +51

      All stingers are ovipositors, but not all ovipositors are stingers. The point is that they can't sting people.

    • @eljanrimsa5843
      @eljanrimsa5843 25 дней назад +57

      I prefer getting stung over getting ovipositored.

    • @mcblaggart8565
      @mcblaggart8565 25 дней назад +12

      @@bugjams And we all prefer it that way.

    • @belofost
      @belofost 25 дней назад +17

      ​@@eljanrimsa5843didn't hear about any wasps that can parasitize humans. Some flies can though, botflies for example

  • @NatsumeRyu
    @NatsumeRyu 24 дня назад +9

    "There's a wasp for that." I was prepared but it still hit me in the face.

  • @wickedcabinboy
    @wickedcabinboy 25 дней назад +16

    One of the best, most frightening and disgusting videos you have produced. Great job. I first encountered this phenomenon on my tomato plants. I found this huge green caterpillar with a dozen or more small oval shaped white tumors on it (at least that's what I thought they were.) But nay, nay, nay, (apologies to John Pinette) it was worse than that. It was pure nightmare fuel. What I found was a Tomato Hornworm that had been parasitized by a small braconid wasp, Cotesia congregatus (think about that name for just a second.) And the larvae were feeding on the Hornworm from the outside inwards. It was both shocking and fascinating at the same time. I'll never forget seeing that. (gag)

    • @DuchessofEarlGrey
      @DuchessofEarlGrey 24 дня назад +4

      Oh lordy. I googled it. WHY. Uuugh, my back is all squirmy now xP

    • @wickedcabinboy
      @wickedcabinboy 23 дня назад +1

      @@DuchessofEarlGrey - 😂😂

    • @MissPoplarLeaf
      @MissPoplarLeaf 23 дня назад +1

      Those baby wasps did you a favor and saved your plants!

    • @Nephilimfields
      @Nephilimfields 22 дня назад

      @@DuchessofEarlGrey Ok, now I gotta google it... *googles*... 🤢 oof

    • @DuchessofEarlGrey
      @DuchessofEarlGrey 22 дня назад +1

      @@Nephilimfields Nooo, now I'm thinking of those images again!

  • @creature_claire
    @creature_claire 25 дней назад +108

    Please never stop making these.

  • @mrstupiduniverse731c
    @mrstupiduniverse731c 25 дней назад +134

    8:50 I vote we officially give it the name "Butterfly Demon"

    • @brewski118sempire
      @brewski118sempire 23 дня назад +7

      It needs to be a boss in a souls game.

    • @GapingGorble
      @GapingGorble 22 дня назад +2

      Be extra fancy & spell it "daemon"

    • @echospecter2450
      @echospecter2450 21 день назад

      When you meet one a health bar appears and the music turns to latin

  • @tombo_sq9526
    @tombo_sq9526 25 дней назад +70

    As an entomologist, I love you ZeFrank

  • @chezmoi42
    @chezmoi42 25 дней назад +9

    Ooooh, a spooky Halloween special! 🎃🪰🎃🪰🎃
    When I had asparagus in my garden, I loved my parasitic wasps, who laid their eggs in the larvae of the asparagus beetles.

  • @csimet
    @csimet 21 день назад +2

    1:48... "hippies". LOL... some of the best lines from this guy are missed by many. The amount of research that goes into these videos is amazing.

  • @BonaparteBardithion
    @BonaparteBardithion 25 дней назад +115

    Suddenly, I'm a lot less grossed out by the symbiotic relationship of fig wasps and their fruit.

    • @IzItShiny
      @IzItShiny 25 дней назад +11

      Still never eating figs again, tho. 🤣

    • @SuziQ.
      @SuziQ. 25 дней назад +4

      They live inside the fruit? 😮😱

    • @AtlasJotun
      @AtlasJotun 25 дней назад

      @@SuziQ. Yeah, but don't worry: the figs produce an enzyme that breaks down the bodies inside 🤮

    • @chitinskin9860
      @chitinskin9860 25 дней назад +23

      @@SuziQ. They live in the flower, but are absorbed and digested by the plant before it turns into a fruit, leaving no wasps after that point. This confuses some people as the flower resembles the unripe fruit. I would go into more detail but for some reason the censorship bots really don't want me to talk about plant and wasp life-cycles, so just look it up on Wikipedia.

    • @SuziQ.
      @SuziQ. 25 дней назад

      @@chitinskin9860 ,
      Thanks. I did.

  • @nimbus997
    @nimbus997 25 дней назад +65

    7:55 "heheh, dont worry we're gonna keep it" caught me so off guard i laughed into a coughing fit. Amazing video as always!

    • @burnerdaughter
      @burnerdaughter 25 дней назад +3

      Glad I'm not the only one, I was worried what it says about me that this is the part that got me so hard 😅

    • @pmc2999
      @pmc2999 24 дня назад +1

      Ah, but it's the tone of voice that really kills it!😂

  • @romanalex3468
    @romanalex3468 25 дней назад +158

    10:19 this is just metal enough for me to actually want to do to take care of my clothes moths

    • @ArgentCosmonaut
      @ArgentCosmonaut 25 дней назад +2

      Brutal

    • @MrThewhore
      @MrThewhore 25 дней назад

      ​@@ArgentCosmonautI would feel so badass knowing a tiny war happened on my clothes, just to keep my clothes in good condition lol

    • @archmage_of_the_aether
      @archmage_of_the_aether 24 дня назад +2

      No no holes in your shirts is way more metal

    • @ArgentCosmonaut
      @ArgentCosmonaut 24 дня назад +5

      Bro, that's missing all the death and insect carnage.
      It may be lacking visible damage, but within the threads is a *graveyard* of murder wasps and hollow moth beh-bies; pretty metal.

    • @echospecter2450
      @echospecter2450 21 день назад +4

      Yeah thats pretty hardcore, little moth massacre followed by the death of a wasp bloodline through lack of baby's to consume, that's metal.

  • @leothebugnerd
    @leothebugnerd 25 дней назад +10

    as a parasitoid wasp lover I was so happy when I saw this video and even happier when my favourite insect (and probably favourite animal in general) Ampulex compressa was featured 10 seconds in!!

    • @fitipapani9805
      @fitipapani9805 17 дней назад

      my favorite is pepsis. ampulex are adorbs too tho

  • @calarthur96
    @calarthur96 22 дня назад +2

    i work at a summer camp every year as the photographer, and last summer the campers were mesmerized by a stump stabber wasp on a small tree next to an evening activity. they were really scared of it bc that thing looks like a MASSIVE stinger. so i used my phone to identify it and learn more and had a little info session with the campers about how not-dangerous but super-fucked-up it was. convinced the campers to give it space and admire it from a distance. what strange critters we share this world with 🙂 thanks for making this!

  • @cameronjameson2878
    @cameronjameson2878 25 дней назад +23

    That ant attack at the very end was awesome! It was "this doesn't fit into the narrative really, but it's cool and has to be displayed somewhere in this video", I believe that was the thought process there 💯.

  • @jaygorippa6746
    @jaygorippa6746 25 дней назад +75

    The song at the end.... magnificent touch Sir

  • @GeographRick
    @GeographRick 25 дней назад +57

    This is like 'Alien' level horrifying.

  • @Just-Nikki
    @Just-Nikki 19 дней назад +4

    2:54 These are all over my compost pile every year. I remember freaking out the first time I saw them because I thought they had giant stingers.

  • @DefaOmega
    @DefaOmega 25 дней назад +6

    "Oop just made a poop" is an A+ quote

  • @miguelfreitas5343
    @miguelfreitas5343 25 дней назад +40

    My dad hates cockroaches to death, like, he legit can't stand them. He was very happy once I told him about the Emerald Wasp :p

    • @alclay8689
      @alclay8689 25 дней назад +3

      Your dad is not alone lol. Me and my old roommate had a suicide pact if the house ever got invaded by coclroaches. Heck in this new place I subscribed to big control before getting internet. F those things lol

    • @sabinegierth-waniczek4872
      @sabinegierth-waniczek4872 22 дня назад +1

      Join the club! I found the footage featuring the cockroaches utterly satisfying - they, and ants, are very interesting insecta, but manage to bring out my dark side (I even would go so far as to admit to h8ing them, the biological value of at least ants notwithstanding!).

  • @myboysd5772
    @myboysd5772 25 дней назад +113

    Thanks i feel disgusted and intriqued, mostly disgusted.

  • @knightfishing
    @knightfishing 25 дней назад +15

    ZeFrank, teaching us more about the animal kingdom than anyone else for over a decade 🙌

  • @MrKillzy
    @MrKillzy 21 день назад +1

    Been following for a long long time and I absolutely love that you still have the same humor, the same style of narrating that accidentally informs everyone to the subject that you're showcasing. Dont ever change man. Love all that you do.

  • @etherscholar
    @etherscholar 25 дней назад +6

    "I think at this point you know the drill" - indeed xD.
    Let's start a petition for "Butterfly Demon"
    "There's a wasp for that" - probably more true than I care to know.
    and those microwasps are CRAZY. Nature scary. Awesome as always, thanks Ze

    • @Nephilimfields
      @Nephilimfields 22 дня назад

      Nature is very scary. You don't have to go farther than us humans for proof of that.

  • @benroberts3677
    @benroberts3677 25 дней назад +83

    Recently found out that there are MANY types of parasitoid wasps in my area of Pennsylvania. I always assumed (for no apparent reason) that they were not in anywhere but sandy or jungle like areas

    • @al77709
      @al77709 25 дней назад +23

      There are many types of parasitoid wasps everywhere! While beetles hold the current record, some entomologists believe wasps are the order with the highest number of species overall, because for every beetle there's probably a wasp that eats that beetle alive.

    • @IzItShiny
      @IzItShiny 25 дней назад +7

      That assumption was your brain trying to protect you. :)

    • @McSenkel
      @McSenkel 25 дней назад +3

      Nah, they are literally everywhere.

    • @boorango122
      @boorango122 25 дней назад +8

      parasites and parasitoids are such lovely little weirdos. basically every multicellular species has at least one specialized multicellular parasite or parasitoid, and most of those are beneficial to the health of the species as a whole!
      also Micropredators, like some ticks and mosquitoes, are less specialized but even more cool and vital!
      nature's little socialist tax collectors

    • @The1nvisibleJeevas
      @The1nvisibleJeevas 25 дней назад +4

      Can confirm! The type that parasitizes the hornworm caterpillar is my favorite. Plus they're all too small to really hurt us and have no interest in using us as hosts! They're just little friends. (Also if you see a little cotton ball attacked to a leaf, that's also a parasitoid wasp's doing).

  • @macroglossumstellatarum5932
    @macroglossumstellatarum5932 25 дней назад +15

    Weirdly the microscopic parasitoid wasps end up being some of the most adorable insects out there, like the Baeus genus, which are basically a sphere that's half eyes by volume.

    • @KSignalEingang
      @KSignalEingang 24 дня назад +3

      Omg thanks for this, I just GIS'ed Baeus and my kids are absolutely losing their minds over these round little friends.

    • @slwrabbits
      @slwrabbits 23 дня назад +1

      so derpy-cute!

  • @damaracarpenter8316
    @damaracarpenter8316 25 дней назад +33

    I have a friend obsessed with Parasitoid wasps I'll send her this video!!!

  • @MerryMrMassacre
    @MerryMrMassacre 15 дней назад +2

    The emerald jewel wasp has been one of my favourite insects for a long time.

  • @dannuttle9005
    @dannuttle9005 23 дня назад

    One of the best videos ever from a channel that routinely hits grand slam home runs. My favorite part is pointing out that, as annoying as wasps are to us personally, and as horrifying as their behavior, they also are part of the balanced ecosystem, and keep worse pests under control.

  • @Bencraft1010
    @Bencraft1010 25 дней назад +65

    1:30 "watchyagonnafindisa waSp BeBeh" I love the way he speaks

  • @muffinfluff2476
    @muffinfluff2476 25 дней назад +29

    There i was, hugely bummed out by grief, but lo, a gross ze frank video is here to take my mind off my dead father and on to parasitic wasps

    • @skycat404
      @skycat404 25 дней назад +6

      Eyyyyy mine is in Stage 4 cancer so I feel ya bud. Check out his nudibrach videos.

    • @katewheeler3984
      @katewheeler3984 25 дней назад +3

      @@skycat404love that one

    • @FlinnGaidin
      @FlinnGaidin 25 дней назад +3

      Condolences 😔

    • @muffinfluff2476
      @muffinfluff2476 25 дней назад +6

      @skycat404 I'm sorry. Mine caught covid and died of pneumonia. It was a shock. Love these videos though, always make me smile
      Be gentle on yourself, grief is hard

    • @muffinfluff2476
      @muffinfluff2476 25 дней назад +4

      @@FlinnGaidin thank you

  • @Qwertylol
    @Qwertylol 25 дней назад +30

    Happy Halloween everyone! And perfect, a spooky True Facts from ZeFrank ❤
    The outro song is honestly a jam, well done

  • @HLBear
    @HLBear 21 день назад +1

    I've heard there is a discussion around whether it's safe to release lantern moth parasitic wasps to stop their advance. It was nice to hear the unintended consequences were being considered. 😊

  • @suetyhercules7717
    @suetyhercules7717 25 дней назад +5

    Using this calming voiceover in an attempt to cure my fear of wasps

    • @slwrabbits
      @slwrabbits 23 дня назад

      Well, at least these wasps aren't after you. They have a different meal in mind!

  • @SomeYouTubeTraveler
    @SomeYouTubeTraveler 25 дней назад +52

    Dang, I'm seeing every RUclipsr I love getting sponsored by Ground News nowadays. A+ sponsor who deserves all the support it can get!

  • @Entertainment11777
    @Entertainment11777 25 дней назад +4

    Than insect martial arts is some next level footage. I never imagined that they'd fight on that level, using their legs to kick each other and stuff

  • @strider5964
    @strider5964 25 дней назад +43

    I'm supposed to be studying for a quiz but a new True Facts video dropped so this is more important!

  • @dialdfordesi
    @dialdfordesi 15 дней назад +1

    I started growing milkweed and started seeing these giant black wasps. Like other parasitic wasps, they're not aggressive and they tend to go after crickets and grasshoppers. They're nice, just freaky big

  • @EscapeePrisoner
    @EscapeePrisoner 25 дней назад +5

    "There's a Wasp for that", is my new go to sentence.

  • @jongroskin729
    @jongroskin729 25 дней назад +31

    That wasp song was pretty funky but the puffin song is still topping the charts.

    • @AndrewCheshire
      @AndrewCheshire 23 дня назад

      @@jongroskin729 No Sir, it's second to "Koalas in the Rain."

    • @Vestajik
      @Vestajik 22 дня назад

      Nah its the mother fucking sexy ostrich

  • @thedolt9215
    @thedolt9215 25 дней назад +26

    I am fascinated and totally creeped out all at the same time! Great presentation!

  • @savannahlewis6156
    @savannahlewis6156 25 дней назад +8

    We use wasps to control the flies on our farm! Thanks for sharing, it’s fascinating to see behind the scenes of what those little guys are doing for us. Love your work

  • @SpaceyBrain
    @SpaceyBrain 24 дня назад +4

    I freaking love parasitic wasps. They're so darn interesting. Thanks for the vid on my favorite insects

  • @stephaneclerc667
    @stephaneclerc667 25 дней назад

    I can't get enough of your videos
    I don't know how many people are writing the script, but damn, the smaller the number, the better they are
    And they deserve a raise
    Keep this masterpiece of a channel alive as long as me please

  • @Unitedtribute
    @Unitedtribute 25 дней назад +21

    Always love when Frank makes a little song for the end of the video.

    • @recoil53
      @recoil53 25 дней назад

      I think the channel is a backdoor was for Ze Frank to release his album.

  • @Zelical
    @Zelical 25 дней назад +12

    Discovered my first one a few months ago, a fly-parasitoid wasp called Dirhinus. Their heads are bizarre and they look super cool. He baffled me and I had to go through a few groups to identify his strange forehead.

  • @Crakinator
    @Crakinator 25 дней назад +6

    The construction of the ovipositors are amazing, I LOVE learning about human technology which animals have already inadvertently invented

  • @J.A.Smith2397
    @J.A.Smith2397 24 дня назад +3

    Dam YT didn't even notify me! Like I've said before, you rekindled my love of nature learning!!!

  • @cravatez5218
    @cravatez5218 25 дней назад +2

    Hi Frank, been watching your videos for some time now. At first your comment made me laugh-a lot. But then I realised the footage you commenting on is plainly exceptionally stunning. Very entertaining, amusing and educational. Just love it. Greets, Paul.

  • @Jayluvlee87
    @Jayluvlee87 25 дней назад +24

    "The babies are vegetarians (hippies)" 😂😂😂😂😂😂 I bout spit my coffee out

  • @xsleep1
    @xsleep1 25 дней назад +29

    Always a great day when Ze drops a new video.

    • @booper343
      @booper343 25 дней назад +1

      We need many more ❤

    • @emberrein6670
      @emberrein6670 25 дней назад

      I screen captured his new video& sent it to my husband in excitement. Always love ze frank, he makes a new video about every 4 weeks, right when im jonesing bad lol

  • @SizzleMoonSong
    @SizzleMoonSong 25 дней назад +5

    Wow ~ that WASAP~ASAP~ PSA outro song was exactally what i needed to be slapped with without knowing it...
    Thanks for the hyperparastoid musical injection that will consume my every thought Ze.

  • @quietone748
    @quietone748 23 дня назад

    Has the world turned upside down? This was posted two days ago and only 28K views?? I'm shocked.
    Now settling in to watch all of the unsettling humor-laced commentary from Maestro Ze.

  • @therealwillsmith
    @therealwillsmith 23 дня назад

    This really changed my perspective on wasps, I think this is one of my fav zefrank vids just because of how informative it is

  • @TwinkleTwinkleTruly
    @TwinkleTwinkleTruly 25 дней назад +20

    Nancy just smacking that very rude wasp 😂

  • @Laquilius
    @Laquilius 25 дней назад +18

    Oh yeah, time to get some of that A+ knowledge straight to the dome, with A++ commentary.

  • @lascannon
    @lascannon 25 дней назад +10

    @5:25 how fitting that someone with the last name Eggs, is the primary author on a study that looks at how wasps lays eggs!

    • @AudraK
      @AudraK 25 дней назад +3

      Good eye! 😂

  • @TheWhiteleather
    @TheWhiteleather 23 дня назад

    I love the trend of ZeFrank including more actual information and fewer asides to 'Jerry'. This particular video is superb!
    I am a professional biologist and even I learned a few bits of info I did not know: the size of the egg vs ovipositor, the ovipositor as a sniffer looking for CO2 or competing wasp larvae....simply fascinating.

  • @andrewpanciuk7933
    @andrewpanciuk7933 25 дней назад +1

    one of the best, most enlightening, most awesomely informative and groovy zefrank exposures of how friggin incredible mother nature is that i have ever seen! Pls keep goin, Frank! so grateful for the insights into our wonderful world.

  • @B20K3
    @B20K3 25 дней назад +126

    ZeFrank saying "sus" button : 0:42

    • @zed7038
      @zed7038 16 дней назад +4

      0:43 works better

  • @dragondraems42
    @dragondraems42 25 дней назад +65

    Yay! I love parasitoid wasps. They're wretched, but they don't have any choice not to be, and I find that strangely compelling.

    • @starscreamthecruel8026
      @starscreamthecruel8026 25 дней назад +22

      They dont know they are wretched. Nature just decided to make them monsters.

    • @Cheezitnator
      @Cheezitnator 25 дней назад +19

      To be fair, if you have a garden, it's good to have some around to keep certain pests under control. Every critter has a part to play in the natural world.

    • @dragondraems42
      @dragondraems42 25 дней назад +22

      @@Cheezitnator yeah! Trying to apply human morality to nature is a losing battle, they simply exist in the world the same as any other animal

    • @anabee8310
      @anabee8310 25 дней назад +3

      Maybe as a quite parasitic speeches (who also designate what's wretched or not) we are mesmerized by others who just go ahead and do

    • @pendlera2959
      @pendlera2959 24 дня назад

      From the perspective of most factory farmed animals, I'm sure humans are considered worse than wasps. (Not trying to promote veganism, just making an analogy.)

  • @SithMami
    @SithMami 24 дня назад

    Absolutely love the bespoke songs he includes at the end of these videos. And all of the other content. Thanks, Ze Frank ♡

  • @unixnut
    @unixnut 21 день назад

    I find it impressive how you managed to make a video about parasitoid wasps without even needing to mention fig wasps or their hyper-parasites. Nice flex.
    I really like how you came up with both a slogan AND a song for wasps. 😂

  • @miirico5398
    @miirico5398 25 дней назад +31

    1:48 Legit Hilarious.

  • @Aswaguespack
    @Aswaguespack 25 дней назад +6

    The closing music was just a riot! My favorite part of the presentation.

  • @Eric-yj5xg
    @Eric-yj5xg 25 дней назад +24

    Man google sent me a notification 1 min after being attacked by a wasp

    • @terryhunt2659
      @terryhunt2659 25 дней назад +6

      That's the Surveillance Society for you. Welcome to the Panopticon!

  • @kellyharrison5184
    @kellyharrison5184 24 дня назад

    When I was a lad in the 1970's I was traumatized by an episode of the original 'Battlestar Galactica' wherein humans are parasitized by giant waspoids. There is also an old Dr Who episode in the same vein. Those were terrifying things to watch for a young kid! (And of course I loved every minute.)

  • @105lgrays
    @105lgrays 25 дней назад +1

    The song at the end. Love it!. Thanks for all laughs.

  • @Vee_of_the_Weald
    @Vee_of_the_Weald 25 дней назад +33

    0:26 “It’ll beetle’larious” 👌🏼👌🏼👌🏼

  • @macroglossumstellatarum5932
    @macroglossumstellatarum5932 25 дней назад +36

    2:20 "It looks like a stinger but it's not"
    Correct, it's the other way around! The stingers in hymenopterans (bees, wasps, ants) are actually modified ovipositors! Which is why males can't have one even if evolution tried to make them survive.
    (And the "stinger" on the scorptionfly, related to lacewings, is actually the males behbeh making bits. Makes the Stingwings from Fallout that use it as a weapon even more weird.)

    • @ryankunst668
      @ryankunst668 25 дней назад +8

      If I can have nipples why can't a male wasp have a stinger?
      Also that makes sense for the fallout universe. It'd be weird if it wasn't weird.

    • @solarnova3502
      @solarnova3502 25 дней назад

      it's a fun question but in human development (I think probably for mammals in general but I'd need to fact check that one) nipples form before other bits in the womb! basically before it's decided what everything else is gonna be, baby you already has nipples. ​@ryankunst668
      wouldn't be called mammals without the mammaries hahaha
      but yeah male wasps don't lay eggs so don't need an ovipositor (which could also be a stinger. they just don't have it). I hear birds like make bees and wasps better bc venom makes them bitter and the males have more fat too. more you know! I just really like bugs

    • @Erewhon2024
      @Erewhon2024 25 дней назад

      Because you don't have a vagina. Nipples are modified sweat glands, not essential reproductive organs.​@@ryankunst668

    • @pendlera2959
      @pendlera2959 24 дня назад

      @@ryankunst668 Maybe the male's reproductive organ needs to be more genetically conserved in order to ensure mating success.

  • @elbandzioro
    @elbandzioro 25 дней назад +15

    I mean , they could at least pay some child support before leaving their child with the caterpilar...

  • @vancouverislandandthething3945
    @vancouverislandandthething3945 12 часов назад

    @zefrank If you ever feel like everything you do is too much please know two Canadians just said, "There are two people in this world we have learned more about "life" from than anyone else in decades of life. And that is Sir David Attenborough and you.
    And today intelligent factual (hilarious, beautiful, engaging, thought provoking, etc etc etc) information is needed more than ever.
    Thank you for giving us a rare gift. The gift of peeking into what makes this world worth living and fighting for. You wrap it in such a way it makes core memories instead of info to be forgotten over time.
    I haven't had coffee so this gratitude post is not as elegant as I would have liked but hey I'm a species that cannot be defined at any time. Although I imagine my 3rd ovary would give you a place to start. 🤣
    Love from two crazy Canadians (hubby and I) you've kept a bit saner.
    🇨🇦♥️🇨🇦

  • @NevaehS
    @NevaehS 23 дня назад

    I love the last bit! I knew there were microbugs you can buy to deal with pests, but I didn't know they were wasps! But when you said 'it's like wearing fur without the controvery' I lost it that's so funny😂