Meet the Meat Bee... the Western Yellowjacket! | Deep Look

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  • Опубликовано: 31 окт 2022
  • Why is that yellowjacket crashing your BBQ? Well, she wants what you're having: burgers, hot dogs, fish and turkey. But she doesn't eat them herself. Her nest's larvae need that protein to develop. So she carves up your dinner and makes teeny-tiny meatballs for them.
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    --
    Yellowjackets bring back all kinds of interesting fare to their nests. The scavenging species might make meatballs out of moth wings, cockroaches or pieces of carrion. And all that food gathering and flying around gives adult yellowjackets an appetite. After delivering scavenged foods to the larvae, adult yellowjackets prod the youngsters and they offer their thanks in the form of a sugary throw up, or exudate. The adults slurp that up and jet off on more meatball missions.
    ---+ Are yellowjackets pollinators?
    Yellowjackets are pollinators! They visit flowers to gather sugary nectar that helps fuel their flight. They’re not as good at pollinating plants as bees are because their bodies are less hairy so they don’t pick up as much pollen.
    ---+ Do yellowjackets die after they sting?
    Yellowjackets do not die after they sting. They can sting multiple times, but it’s a last resort when they are threatened.
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    www.kqed.org/science/1980663/...
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    #yellowjackets #vespulapensylvanica #deeplook
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Комментарии • 753

  • @kenturkey1971
    @kenturkey1971 Год назад +2540

    Just remember, when she's making a meatball out of your burger, she was walking on that mouse earlier! What a cutie!

    • @Baddaby
      @Baddaby Год назад +1

      People in the US are afraid of their own shadow and I have proof:

    • @BorisKOUKA
      @BorisKOUKA Год назад +175

      Right, they can be responsable of food poisoning

    • @alveolate
      @alveolate Год назад +260

      so they're basically giant flies with stingers?

    • @xiaodie_Lin
      @xiaodie_Lin Год назад +34

      They might poison the food

    • @astick5249
      @astick5249 Год назад +32

      They clean themselves tho

  • @Kandosii
    @Kandosii Год назад +1185

    My favorite memory of yellowjackets happened at a garden picnic--someone brought salmon pâté, and I noticed a yellowjacket _hurl_ herself into it. She did that "quality assurance check" mentioned in the video, then started scooping up an increasingly large meatball, while more and more picnic attendees watched. When the meatball was so big she needed all six legs to hold onto it, she finally lifted off... and topped out at about chest-height. We all wordlessly stepped aside to clear a path for her, save for one--somebody needed to open the garden gate for her, obviously. We then watched her slowly buzz her way along a hedge and out of sight.
    I can't blame her for her enthusiasm, that pâté _was_ in fact delicious.

  • @Bearded_Bream
    @Bearded_Bream Год назад +273

    I love the idea that someone had to grill up some burgers solely for a yellow jacket to feed her babies.

    • @lemuellcabahug6460
      @lemuellcabahug6460 Год назад +26

      If it passes the yellow jacket test, you know your food is going to go big.

    • @kenyanicholas6809
      @kenyanicholas6809 Год назад +3

      Thanks I hate it

    • @loisma2356
      @loisma2356 Год назад +5

      Don’t forget! They also prepared a *whole human arm* just for a yellow jacket to sting!

    • @billfred9411
      @billfred9411 8 месяцев назад +4

      More accurately they are feeding there sisters. Every yellow jacket nest is the result of a single queen that starts her own nest from scratch. How it works is high nutrition is what causes queens to be made so at first there is a bunch of workers. Then when the numbers go up so does the nutrition collected which means by the end the workers are spoiling the larvae rotten causing most of them to be queens which then leave to hibernate and start again next year.

    • @muhammadtiano6110
      @muhammadtiano6110 8 месяцев назад

      I think of them as a superior to the bee

  • @reggymcmonkey5737
    @reggymcmonkey5737 Год назад +18

    Such a breath of fresh air seeing support for wasps! People finally started appreciating bees, but it was upsetting seeing that hate still remain for wasps--as if they had no positive roles in gardens and their environment!! They hunt pests and pollinate too (even if they aren't as good at it as bees), and most don't sting you unless given a real reason to!
    My mom nurtured a paper wasp back to health with mushed banana and water droplets, and they're cute when they circle around you before going back to whatever they were doing before!

  • @VinoTriMulia
    @VinoTriMulia Год назад +603

    What I love about this kind of videos is we are educated on which species that are actually harmful, harmless, or only attacking when threatened. It gives us good insight on what to do when we're facing these species in the real life. Thank you for the videos!

    • @xiaodie_Lin
      @xiaodie_Lin Год назад +2

      Yes

    • @CymruCreator
      @CymruCreator Год назад +9

      The smaller ones are very aggressive, the larger ones are not as bad.

    • @allentoyokawa9068
      @allentoyokawa9068 Год назад +14

      @@CymruCreator like people

    • @Egg01990
      @Egg01990 9 месяцев назад

      Do they do these with coconuts? I saw a lot of wasps

  • @ajhuredreams
    @ajhuredreams Год назад +32

    I used to hate when yellow jackets would visit while I was eating outside. Then a friend pointed out that they're just hungry and maybe I should share. Now whenever I see a yellow jacket eyeing my food, I break off a hunk and set it on the other side of the table. They get a tasty meatball, and I get to eat in peace. And I get a little entertainment, too! Now that I'm not afraid of them, they're kinda fun to watch.

    • @jediskunk67
      @jediskunk67 22 дня назад

      You need to look beyond their stinging attitudes and focus on the positive side of them.

    • @JetFalcon710
      @JetFalcon710 16 дней назад

      ​@@jediskunk67 I think they already got it figured out

  • @greenkepunkies
    @greenkepunkies Год назад +190

    I love when Laura's voice appear on the videos! She gives a totally different vibe to them that I cannot explain. Her voice fits so well in this kind of content!

  • @Velkhana_The_Myth
    @Velkhana_The_Myth Год назад +469

    People think of yellow jackets as pests or a nuisance , but others think of them as a incredible creature that help clean the environment of animal carcasses and fallen fruits

    • @KQEDDeepLook
      @KQEDDeepLook  Год назад +73

      EXACTLY

    • @Velkhana_The_Myth
      @Velkhana_The_Myth Год назад +25

      @@TrevorMauk that's why I said why some people view them as nuisances or pests. Also. Did he have a allergy? The venom of the yellow jacket are too weak to cause harm to people.

    • @ChrisG1392
      @ChrisG1392 Год назад +3

      like any predator, they drive the evolution of their prey animals.

    • @glebeldionrayparcon1008
      @glebeldionrayparcon1008 Год назад +7

      @@Velkhana_The_Myth aren't they also pollinators?

    • @vicvega3614
      @vicvega3614 Год назад +11

      Well if that yellowjacket was on something dead and then lands on ur food, not good

  • @thelakesterswildworld8335
    @thelakesterswildworld8335 Год назад +107

    Several years ago, I used to hate wasps, but now I think they are fascinating and I appreciate them.

    • @Failedprodegy42
      @Failedprodegy42 Год назад

      I still hate them.

    • @nstrainfanyt
      @nstrainfanyt Год назад +8

      What if one stings you though 😂

    • @thelakesterswildworld8335
      @thelakesterswildworld8335 Год назад +8

      @@nstrainfanyt I’ll still appreciate them. I’ve been stung a few times before.

    • @nstrainfanyt
      @nstrainfanyt Год назад +7

      @@thelakesterswildworld8335 so you're like "oh thank you for the venom mr. Wasp". Just a joke lol

    • @Leeyum96969
      @Leeyum96969 Год назад +1

      Same

  • @happybalint
    @happybalint Год назад +65

    I personally find it easy to distinguish between yellow jackets and honeybees. The hair, the brightness of the colors and their body shape is different.

    • @RaidianaS
      @RaidianaS 9 месяцев назад +1

      When you constantly struggle with these things trying to live on your exterior walls you have to learn fast

    • @acutechicken5798
      @acutechicken5798 9 месяцев назад

      The buzzing sounds they make are also different if you're accustomed to bee buzzes.

    • @whoknowswhocares3804
      @whoknowswhocares3804 8 месяцев назад

      honey bees look fuzzy and yellow jackets look smooth and are thinner and longer.

  • @verycoolname9404
    @verycoolname9404 Год назад +31

    Grew up on a farm. Early in the morning, all the flies like to hang out on the barn walls, trying to catch the sun to warm up. The yellowjackets and wasps can handle the cold a bit better, so they are active earlier. If you were watching at the right time, you could see the wasps and yellowjackets flying up to the barn walls and grabbing flies. They chew them a bit and roll them up before carrying them off, just like in this video.

  • @Dysiode
    @Dysiode 9 месяцев назад +4

    There was a colony of yellow jackets at one place I lived and didn't realize they weren't bees, I got very close to the entrance and spent a while watching and they never even came to investigate me. It's wonderful to hear that they're scavengers since that's such an important role!
    I also was at an outdoor brunch place and was shocked to find "bees" LOVED crab meat, so I helped them out by breaking off little pieces, and some deal, never once felt threatened by them. I know they're some of the more painful stings out there (props to the person who let themselves get stung!!) but they seem a lot less concerned by humans than other wasps so I'm happy to let them live

  • @bulbousborb
    @bulbousborb Год назад +59

    It's so nice to see a lot of people not blindly hating on wasps in the comments and appreciating them! As someone who has a garden, I have seen the benefit of them and I welcome them, (I also have never been stung, even when being in close proximity to them many times, including yellow jackets). So, I'm glad more people are realizing the good in them as well. And there are so many beautiful and interesting species too, they deserve more infatuation than dislike.

    • @detergentleman1235
      @detergentleman1235 Год назад +1

      They are inquisitive little creatures. I respect my fellow souls, and they know it. So when I hold up my finger next to them flying, they usually land on it. Such amazing creatures 💚

    • @kenyanicholas6809
      @kenyanicholas6809 Год назад

      I have a garden and I hate having to choose between stingy things or harvest destroyers 😓

    • @PeeperSnail
      @PeeperSnail Год назад +2

      @@kenyanicholas6809 If getting stung is a concern in your household it might be a good idea to call someone who can remove the nest from your house or garden. Cases where people get stung a lot usually come from africanized bees or other similar invasive and bizarrely aggressive species.
      Pollinators like bees and wasps are great, and the fear for them is overblown, but it’s not unlikely to be in a situation where they hamper one’s quality of life. If you or anyone in your household suspect being allergic to bee/wasp venom by all means get the nests removed! Better to have nibbled crops than life-or-death trips to the hospital.

    • @arher9598
      @arher9598 9 месяцев назад

      Indeed I've seen one flying with catterpillar. I welcomed them although once I threw a sandal at their newly built nest cause they made it right at the front of my rooftop door lol

  • @dangerouscolors
    @dangerouscolors Год назад +209

    finally some love for the vespids on this channel! i love the effort taken to not villainize the animal just living its life, and instead highlight the good they do for the ecosystem. its very appreciated for such an unfairly maligned animal!

    • @KQEDDeepLook
      @KQEDDeepLook  Год назад +32

      Thank you, dangerouscolors! From your avatar it looks like you're a big fan of wasps, hornets and their allies!

    • @dangerouscolors
      @dangerouscolors Год назад +18

      @@KQEDDeepLook i am! theyre my favorite bugs ever! my username is even a reference to their aposematic coloration 😁

    • @nickm6751
      @nickm6751 Год назад +9

      Wasps and mosquitos... reaaaallly hard to justify their existence besides their ecological roles lol. I would eradicate those 2 species if there were no environmental consequences

    • @alveolate
      @alveolate Год назад +1

      @@nickm6751 yea i was wondering... don't yellowjackets also kill honeybees? or is that just some other wasps?

    • @bladeofveng
      @bladeofveng Год назад +4

      @@dangerouscolors that dead mouse on your burger is sure yummy

  • @bigshrekhorner
    @bigshrekhorner Год назад +70

    When I am eating outside during the summer, wasps often swarm around my food, but they are never seeking to sting me; they just want the food I am eating.
    So, I just cut a piece of meat or cheese for them and leave it a bit further from my plate so we won't bother each other and enjoy our meals (and because it is not very sanitary for an insect to walk on your food). And they do indeed not bother, because they aren't seeking to make people's lives miserable, they just want to eat. They are also very pretty animals! I often take photos of them snooping around the food I gave them and they look adorable.
    I do believe wasps are very misunderstood animals, especially considering how important their ecological role is (either as pollinators, "cleaners" or population controllers). I understand people with allergies wanting to avoid them, but I don't understand the mindset of some people that go "wasps should be eradicated" just because they have been stung once, because they swarm their food or because they simply don't like them.

    • @jayemover_16
      @jayemover_16 Год назад +4

      Don't forget a little bit of something sweet! A small chunk of overripe fruit makes a perfect dessert for them, they go nuts for sweet things.

    • @MildMisanthropeMaybeMassive
      @MildMisanthropeMaybeMassive Год назад

      Wasps are very inefficient pollinators due to their lack of hair.

    • @DigitalcircusSlander
      @DigitalcircusSlander Год назад

      Wasps- literally murder people there's a hornet named murder Hornet they aren't misunderstood animals 💀
      And the killed half the population of the honeybees, 💀 I get what you're saying but no If I see one swarming around my food doing that god awful buzzing sound I'm killing it

    • @bigshrekhorner
      @bigshrekhorner Год назад

      @@DigitalcircusSlander It's literally their job to kill honeybees. You need to stop having the notion of "a lot of honeybees= good; (non-human) animal that kills honeybees = bad". There needs to be someone who controls honeybees' population and that's certain species of wasp (not all of them attack bees. In fact, many wasp species specialise on specific insects). If there was an overpopulation of honeybees, that would be a serious ecological issue as much as underpopulation is/would be.
      It's not wasps that are an issue to honeybees. It's humans.
      And no, not all wasps murder people. The killer hornet you mentioned is literally one species out of the thousands of wasp species there are. Most wasps are not aggressive to people if they are not provoked. And literally any animal can kill people, so this argument is nonsensical.

    • @gnategarta1612
      @gnategarta1612 Год назад +4

      Something else I have noticed is in the around where I live, there are quite a few yellow jackets, but little to no ticks. When I went to a place with barely any yellow jackets, or predatory arthropods for that matter, there were more ticks. All the ticks I had that summer were from the latter place.

  • @Imaedraw
    @Imaedraw Год назад +21

    They usually leave me alone and pollinate my squash plants, and berry plants. As long as they don't get all over aggressive, I don't mind them at all. They're beneficial for my garden.

  • @prasanatg
    @prasanatg Год назад +19

    Hurray. I’m so happy that Laura is back. Love to hear her voice back.

  • @Moranthyst
    @Moranthyst Год назад +11

    Way yellowjacket taking a piece of burger and roll it to carry is amazing! All bugs have their own charm and I love them

  • @AsioEntomo
    @AsioEntomo Год назад +20

    Tons of fellow insect-lovers recommend leaving little tidbits out for wasps, so that they learn that you aren't a threat. Toss a piece of meat over toward the nest, and they'll be more likely to leave you alone.
    We had a nest of some sort of ground-nesting wasps living on our campsite for an entire 4-month field season, and they didn't bother anyone until my supervisor unknowingly tried to hang her hammock over their nest. We didn't even notice them before that!

  • @simantakalita9061
    @simantakalita9061 Год назад +56

    I have to appreciate the skills specially capturing tiny objects perfectly and also the editing. Thanks for another episode. 🤗

  • @chrisb9365
    @chrisb9365 Год назад +4

    I find it amusing that you set up an actual hamburger with a bun and a sauce just to show the wasp in action.

  • @elenaziegler1893
    @elenaziegler1893 Год назад +14

    I remember being at a cookout with a friend and having a wasp come and grab a chunk of meat off my friends plate which was almost as big as it. If flew off all wobbly and we were confused at first but it was really funny. Now I know why it did that!

  • @95Titanium
    @95Titanium 8 месяцев назад +1

    What an amazing timing for this video to pop up.
    A few days ago I was having breakfast outside and one of these little guys spotted my food. After deciding that the egg wasn't for her, she proceeded to a slice of ham and proceeded to cut a chunk off and airlift it away.
    It was the cutest thing I've seen recently.

  • @Lemard77
    @Lemard77 Год назад +2

    If i'm not mistaken the adults do need proteins but they can't digest them themselves, so the larvae after having their fill with the protein the adults gave them will regurgitate the exudate with aminoacids from the broken down proteins. That's why adults drink that alongside the nectar they collect from flowers.

  • @huldu
    @huldu Год назад +25

    I used to be terrified of wasps and hornets but it all changed with knowledge and experience. They have no interest in you, if you leave them alone they leave you alone. It's just a bit sad that often our encounters with them is because we're very close to their hive and they're defending themselves. They do love building hives around or inside our houses. The good thing is once the season is over they'll die off and the hive is dead. I guess a queen could hibernate inside the house and start a new colony but they won't use the old hive comb. Anyways, if you have a problem with these insects contact a professional to deal with them.

    • @jake9854
      @jake9854 Год назад

      nah these wasp r product of a lab species, more or less like Frankenstein product.they re not supposed to exist! we have to eliminate this species to save the human race!

    • @xLuis89x
      @xLuis89x 9 месяцев назад +1

      unless they make a nest right ad your doorstep and you found them invading every single area of your home

    • @huldu
      @huldu 9 месяцев назад

      @@xLuis89x That's why there are professionals that will deal with the problem if it gets to that point.

  • @AercraftAviation
    @AercraftAviation Год назад +2

    I like how she says “Give them some space”
    I recomend dis channel.

  • @renatocann5142
    @renatocann5142 Год назад +5

    YAAA WELCOME BACK LAURA!! And amazing vid as always DL 💚

  • @matttypes2695
    @matttypes2695 Год назад +3

    That wasp carted off the equivalent of like 20lbs of meats

  • @blueberry_borb
    @blueberry_borb Год назад +23

    Wow, great video as always :D. I can’t help but always be a bit nervous around bees and wasps (the latter in particular), but I do notice that understanding these guys a bit more always makes me feel less nervous around them. Thanks for the video!

  • @BillyJupiter
    @BillyJupiter 8 месяцев назад +2

    Once at a BBQ. 2 full grown men watched a wasp slice dice and helicopter off a chunk primo cut, freshly rested.
    We went from knodding and smiling yes to cheering, Biblically. As the little one went up and down hoisting itself up several times due to the sizeable chonky piece of grub it had collected.
    I Cherish that moment.

  • @vivianwilson1271
    @vivianwilson1271 Год назад +7

    HOW DELICIOUS!!! NOT ONLY THE CHOICE OF DELICACIES PROVIDED FOR THEIR HATCHLINGS , BUT ALSO THE WAY THE PRESENTER SERVES IT UP!!!V.W.

  • @Sjalabais
    @Sjalabais Год назад +2

    So lovely that Laura is back! The perfect Deep Look voice.

  • @jakimiyamizu3198
    @jakimiyamizu3198 Год назад +27

    You never failed to impress me deeplook with another educational video ❤❤❤

  • @reionj8816
    @reionj8816 Год назад +4

    Imagine being an insect and having to deal with that predator. When you see that coming your way you run the other way. Ahhh don't mess with them 🤣🤣. Great video deep look

  • @sargentcool1882
    @sargentcool1882 Год назад +3

    Wasps are so cute to me. I know some hate then but they are very helpful and cute. Besides when they sting me. Plus they pick up stuff I don’t want to pick up.

  • @karansjet3823
    @karansjet3823 8 месяцев назад +3

    We always had a plate with rest meat and bones and whatever on the other end of the table so the yellowjackets would leave us alone. and it worked like charm! plus seeing them chew off a meatball thats slightly to big too take off with so they had to do this little run up before they could fly. Hilarious!

  • @mmps18
    @mmps18 Год назад +11

    Wow this really changes the way I look at yellow jackets! Misunderstood little wasps 🥺

  • @TeamCandiru
    @TeamCandiru Год назад +2

    People love to hate on yellow jackets, but they are just so pretty up close.

  • @EnderGamerGirl
    @EnderGamerGirl Год назад +2

    1:20
    Fly: "That meat was mine! Give it back (pls)!"
    Yellowjacket: "Nope."

    • @KQEDDeepLook
      @KQEDDeepLook  Год назад +1

      That cameo made us laugh. If you want to see what the fly was up to at the picnic, here is the episode: ruclips.net/video/jBPFCvEhv9Y/видео.html

  • @majornewb
    @majornewb Год назад +7

    I am happy to share my picnic food with these hard working moms

  • @kingLorshi
    @kingLorshi Год назад +6

    I got so excited when I saw this I watched immediately. Even when I read a lot about wasps there's always something I didn't know, like the protein being called an exudate. I appreciate this channel greatly.

  • @TheTinkili
    @TheTinkili Год назад +14

    I honestly love Yellowjackets. I gladly share my food with them and just... look at them. They're adorable, especially if they cut out something that's way too big for them! It's so funny to see them whirl around with that big piece of whatever, like a helicopter flying in circles, every circly a liiiitle bit higher :'D I once had a yellowjacket give me a... "kiss". I had some juice and one flew directly onto my lips, making the taste test and... bit my lip :'D That hurt a lot, these mandibles are stronger than you think! I did manage to get her to leave without stinging me tho. Actually I have never been stung by one, even when handling them lol

    • @KQEDDeepLook
      @KQEDDeepLook  Год назад +4

      We’re sure they appreciate your generosity!

    • @TheTinkili
      @TheTinkili Год назад +2

      @@KQEDDeepLook Hehe I guess they sense I don't want to hurt them. Maybe. :D

  • @linkdude64
    @linkdude64 Год назад +4

    Thank you, all bugs, bees, and wasps for doing your absolute best and never giving up!!!

  • @PushyPawn
    @PushyPawn Год назад +2

    Laura's back, YAY!

  • @Sufanius
    @Sufanius 9 месяцев назад +2

    Yellow Jackets aren’t to bad. Wasps are just flying ants. Bees wasps and ants are so necessary for our ecosystem. They are also examples of great teamwork. If only humans could learn to work together more.

  • @salt-emoji
    @salt-emoji Год назад +1

    I would love a study that shows if yellow jackets prefer cooked or raw animal protein for their offspring.
    My hypothesis is that they prefer pre cooked protein for the same reason we do, more available calories

  • @palawi7491
    @palawi7491 Год назад +2

    We are thankful to you deep look for providing us with such amazing content.

  • @Rjgxxx
    @Rjgxxx Год назад +26

    I always get so frustrated when people I'm with freak out about wasps when you're out. Just let it do it's thing and it'll leave you alone too. We're all important here

  • @e.t.2914
    @e.t.2914 Год назад +1

    One of my favorite things to do at Renaissance festivals is get a jumbo turkey leg, eat my fill, then hang out till the wasps smell it and start coming to snip off pieces. Can't think of more primitive entertainment.

  • @jasonsinn9237
    @jasonsinn9237 Год назад +1

    All I can ever think about when I see yellowjackets is how I've been swarmed by hives on three different occasions. One time I even had one sting me on the nose and it couldn't pull itself out so I was running around slapping myself 😂. In all regards I should hate them, but instead I respect their fierce approach to survival. Few other life forms fight as hard as they do just to live.🥊

  • @cryoine7194
    @cryoine7194 8 месяцев назад +2

    anyone into gardening should know the value of wasps, generally leave them alone and you wont have problems with them but if their nests are in the way what has to be done has to be done, also paper wasps seem to have a thing for coffee

  • @nikodimaleshkin7689
    @nikodimaleshkin7689 Год назад +1

    Laura is back ! Love you voice and videos. Thank you so Mach.

  • @angelindenile
    @angelindenile Год назад +2

    This is why I always leave a small amount of meat to the side when I barbeque. Yellow jackets get a bad rap, they do so much for their environment by being both pollinators and I've never had issues with them personally. I can understand the issues though, what with them making nests in the places we mow our lawns.

  • @genericalfishtycoon3853
    @genericalfishtycoon3853 Год назад +2

    I have a feeding station for wasps and bees that has caffeinated sugar in easily accessible quality, I also refresh the meat platter daily for the yellow jackets. Burger, chicken, fish, whatever I'm having I just save them some. It's really fun to have thousands of them coming through my bedroom window and using my bee station. I've uploaded a bunch of videos of them in and around my room.

  • @marisa-yu4oz
    @marisa-yu4oz 8 месяцев назад

    those bee shoes are adorable!!

  • @Polandsyndromebodybuilding
    @Polandsyndromebodybuilding Год назад +3

    Amazing close ups

  • @projectgreengamer
    @projectgreengamer Год назад +3

    as cute as this is, I almost wish I wasn't allergic

  • @FV-214_SUPER_CONQUEROR
    @FV-214_SUPER_CONQUEROR Год назад +2

    bees : "i makes honey for a living"
    silk worms : " i make silk to live again"
    wasps : "this world shall know pain"

  • @Guydude777
    @Guydude777 Год назад +2

    The more you know! Thanks Deep Look.

  • @HarmlessAssault
    @HarmlessAssault Год назад +1

    Props to the dude who got stung for our entertainment

  • @AhmedMalik814
    @AhmedMalik814 Год назад +2

    Everytime I watch your videos I am so amazed and admire the work and effort you guys do!

  • @Avabees
    @Avabees Год назад +1

    lovely to see them go to work, up close and personal!

  • @YoungGandalf2325
    @YoungGandalf2325 Год назад +1

    When I die, I don't want to be buried or creamated. Just feed my corpse to a nest of yellowjackets.

  • @tzucwizard
    @tzucwizard Год назад +2

    "She will only sting as a last resort"
    That one wasp that randomly landed just below my eye this summer and stung me: " *and I took that personally* "

  • @panda0777
    @panda0777 Год назад +1

    "Wasp trying to get meat"
    ❝JOEY DOESN’T SHARE FOOD ❞

  • @harumskarum3481
    @harumskarum3481 Год назад +4

    I think they are adorable. We have them all over around the apartment and they have never been scary to me. I also know to keep my distance and respect them though.

  • @sonjaquan5775
    @sonjaquan5775 Год назад +1

    You just answered a 35-year old question that I never knew I had. I used to give ham to yellowjackets from my sandwich at lunch!

  • @jcoludar
    @jcoludar Год назад +1

    Hymenopteran biologist here. Though I admire your work, some things you got wrong:
    -wasps DO need proteins - their venom is made of proteins for example, they just cannot swallow solid food due to their narrow waists. They get their aminoacids from larvas' secretion - the exude
    -exude is not "sugary", it is quite full of other stuff - including aminoacids (which an adult wasp uses to make proteins), larvas are essentially external guts for the wasp colony
    -splitting hairs here, but cladistically speaking, bees are wasps - they are a lineage derived from digger wasps (according to our best knowledge)

  • @mohammedyaser1357
    @mohammedyaser1357 Год назад +7

    I feel really bad for the person who got stung for this video...

  • @ariefaditya1470
    @ariefaditya1470 Год назад +1

    It's good to hear Laura's voice back narrating again

  • @rhonemeyer4277
    @rhonemeyer4277 Год назад +1

    Props to thy guy that held still to get stung by the yellow jacket.
    I salute you sir!
    (or ma'am I dunno xD)

  • @sthui2866
    @sthui2866 7 месяцев назад +1

    In East Asia I would often find small hornet species (Vespa bicolor/velutina) instead of Yellowjackets being the little menaces looking for sugar and meat instead. They would even be curious and land on people, though not in a threatening sense. Sometimes I just share the food and calmly watch them, plus they make super cool subjects for camera close up shots.

  • @hailmammonmoments7568
    @hailmammonmoments7568 Год назад +1

    Big bug nerd here, but I had NO idea that yellow jacket larvae ‘thank’ the adults the way aphids thank ants! 😮

  • @sammisoccer7
    @sammisoccer7 Год назад +1

    I always leave a morsel for them on the side of my plate. My parents think I’m nuts but it seems to distract them from flying in our faces while we eat

  • @touremuhammad5983
    @touremuhammad5983 Год назад +2

    Fun fact: Yellowjackets aren’t the only ones that can sting repeatedly. Bumblebees & most other Native American bees can sting repeatedly thanks to their smooth stingers.

  • @zachb8012
    @zachb8012 Год назад

    I hope y'all credited whoever took that sting, because they took it like a champ. Didn't even flinch.

  • @NolanFriedline
    @NolanFriedline Год назад +2

    The scariest part of this video is when you called it a bee at the beginning! lol

  • @ahmadyulyfirmansah5937
    @ahmadyulyfirmansah5937 Год назад +1

    When I was Young, I thought Yellow Jacket is new kind of mutantion Bee.
    They just resemble to Bee more than Wasp.

  • @animemusicluver1
    @animemusicluver1 Год назад +1

    that explains why I can't eat my sandwiches in peace when I'm on campus

  • @NewMessage
    @NewMessage Год назад +5

    Can ya blame 'em? Who doesn't love BBQ?

  • @beatpirate8
    @beatpirate8 8 месяцев назад

    ive been wondering this my whole life. wow thank you!

  • @bclagnese
    @bclagnese Год назад +1

    Yellow Jackets swarmed me when I was five.

  • @PopsGG
    @PopsGG Год назад +1

    I love watching these girls eat. I usually set aside a bit of meat for them and watch them go to work. It doesn't take long for more than one to show up. I have never been stung or anyone else around me by them.

  • @scraperindustry
    @scraperindustry Год назад

    I always set aside a small piece of meat for the yellow jackets since it's fascinating to watch them ball up the food

  • @yuransoares5647
    @yuransoares5647 Год назад

    Love you Laura Kivlans, the best voice in Deep Look😍

  • @plum.phobia
    @plum.phobia Год назад

    _massive_ shoutout to the person who sacrificed their arm for this video, huge props lol

  • @kimbratton9620
    @kimbratton9620 Год назад

    This was awesome!! I'd love to hear about the dunnart!!

  • @MisterDemonTC
    @MisterDemonTC 9 месяцев назад

    "Hey, who the heck invited you?"
    "I did, you gonna do something about it?"
    "N....no. :("
    "Yea that's what I thought, now get grillin'."

  • @thespacecowboy71
    @thespacecowboy71 Год назад +1

    I've never found a yellow-jacket so cute before

  • @pikagelly7465
    @pikagelly7465 Год назад +1

    Yay, Laura’s back!😁

  • @suyci
    @suyci Год назад

    2:43 Did someone on the team have him/herself get stung again for science? The dedication is real.

  • @christopherb8017
    @christopherb8017 Год назад +1

    My favourite part of the yellow jacket life cycle is when it gets caught in a spider web

  • @kmbdbob
    @kmbdbob Год назад

    Wow.. the simplification in this video is over the top.

  • @monticore1626
    @monticore1626 7 месяцев назад

    I love how they just dig in to the meat

  • @cholm2070
    @cholm2070 Год назад +3

    I’m surprised by the amount of wasp-positive people in the comment section here, it’s genuinely pretty heartwarming. Generally it’s just uneducated slander all around without a second thought. This is a nice change of pace.

  • @Chryspy776
    @Chryspy776 Год назад

    Congratulations on 2M subs, Deep Look!

  • @caralynpeterson9761
    @caralynpeterson9761 Год назад

    This definitely makes me want to give up all my burgers for a yellow jacket! So inspiring!

  • @animalchannel376
    @animalchannel376 7 месяцев назад

    these insects are so smart.

  • @DigitalcircusSlander
    @DigitalcircusSlander Год назад

    "Mama I'm hungry can we have something els-" *NO YOU WILL EAT WHAT YOU ARE GIVEN*

  • @MrSamHideki
    @MrSamHideki Год назад +2

    The fly was jealous of the wasps ability.

    • @KQEDDeepLook
      @KQEDDeepLook  Год назад +2

      That cameo made us laugh. If you want to see what the fly was up to at the picnic, here is the episode: ruclips.net/video/jBPFCvEhv9Y/видео.html

    • @MrSamHideki
      @MrSamHideki Год назад +1

      @@KQEDDeepLook Thank you for the information. Learnt something new today.