These stinging picnic pests don’t deserve our enmity and fear – they are impressive architects that belong to highly developed and complex societies – our expert guide to wasps looks at the common species, their lifecycle and why wasps sting.

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Published: Wednesday, 26 June 2024 at 09:37 AM


Consider the sounds of high summer: the chattering of rooftop starlings, the hum of your neighbour’s lawnmower. Listen more closely and you might be able to hear the delicate scratching of a wasp on the wood of your garden shed.

Wasps are sociable insects, living in vast colonies of up to 10,000 workers that build nests in trees, buildings and old animal burrows.

Love them or loathe them, wasps are a fascinating and hardworking species to watch. Queen wasps hibernate in the winter before emerging in spring to build nests and lay eggs. The workers in the colony will later take over the nest building duties and collect food for the growing larvae in the spring and summer months.

Our guide to wasps looks at common wasp species found in the UK, their lifecycle and why wasps tend to sting in autumn.

Find out what the difference is between a wasp and a bee

There are approximately 9,000 wasp species found in the UK/ Credit: Getty Images

What do wasps do?

Like a number of other insects such as butterflies, moths and flies, wasps are also pollinators of flowers and crops.

What do wasps eat?

Wasps love anything sugary so beware the next time you’re enjoying a cream tea, ice cream or cold cider! Adult wasps don’t need much protein (the bugs they prey on are for the developing brood in the nest) but they do need sugar, which they get in the form of nectar from flowers.

In the process of finding it, the wasps pick up and transfer pollen from flower to flower. Unlike many bees, wasps don’t mind what flowers they visit – as generalist pollinators they’re more abundant than bees in degraded or fragmented habitats and so are important ‘back-up’ pollinators in these areas.

What is the most common wasp species found in the UK?

The most commonly found wasp in the UK is the yellowjacket (Vespula vulgaris), the black and stripy species you often find yourself swatting away. The reputation of this and a few other species has tarred that of another 200,000. Indeed, wasps are second only to beetles in terms of species numbers and there are thought to be at least 100,000 more waiting to be discovered.

Social wasps (that includes our stripy friend) represent less than 1% of the total wasp species in the world. And most aren’t yellow and stripy or fond of picnics.

Dusted with pollen, a common wasp searches for nectar
Dusted with pollen, a common wasp searches for nectar/ Credit: Getty Images

The vast majority of described wasps are tiny black insects that you’d probably mistake for flies. In fact, the smallest insect in the world is a wasp: the ‘fairyfly’ is a mere 0.14mm long and only lives for a few days. Despite its size, it plays a vital role in agriculture, as it lays its eggs in the bodies of crop pests, essentially working as an alternative to chemical pesticides.

How many wasp species are there in the UK?

In the UK there are approximately 9,000 species of wasp. This includes larger wasps species that sting and microscopic parasitic wasps that can’t be seen with the naked eye.

Common wasp species found in Britain

Common/German wasp (Vespula vulgaris/germanica)

Common German wasp
Common/German wasp/Chris Shields

These are the wasps most likely to upset your picnic. V. germanica tends to be more bad tempered than V. vulgaris. These two species of common wasp are practically identical but you can tell them apart by their facial and thorax markings. Both species have a single queen who produces 6,000 to 10,000 workers. They make football-sized nests in the ground or in roofs and trees.

European hornet (Vespa crabro)

IH85---Hornet-male-(Vespa-crabro)
European hornet have a single queen/Illustration Chris Shields

The European hornet is about twice the size of the other social wasps but despite its looks is unlikely to bother you at picnics. Hornet colonies have a single queen and around 100 workers. They like to nest in tree cavities or bird boxes.

Yellow-legged Asian hornet (Vespa velutina)

Yellow-legged Asian hornet
Yellow-legged Asian hornet/Chris Shields

This Asian hornet species is a voracious predator of honeybees that was inadvertently introduced to southern Europe in 2004. It’s now widespread in France, Spain, Italy and Belgium, but not the UK, which has an effective extermination protocol for dealing with these invaders. Suspected sightings can be reported using the Asian Hornet Watch app (available for Apple and Android devices) or by emailing details and photos to the Centre for Ecology & Hydrology alertnonnative@ceh.ac.uk.

It’s not to be mistaken for the world’s biggest wasp, the Asian giant hornet

Red wasp (Vespula rufa)

Red-wasp
A red wasp queen can produce 300 workers/Chris Shields

Red wasps have a distinguishing red tinge on their abdomens. Their nests are smaller and always underground. A single queen will produce around 300 workers. The colony cycle of V. rufa is shorter than V. vulgaris/germanica, ending in late August.

Dolichovespula species

Dolchovespula species
Dolchovespula species/Chris Shields

There are three species of Dolichovespula in the UK. The most common is Dolichovespula media. You can tell them from Vespula as they’re bigger and have blacker abdomens and are only seen in early-mid summer. Their new queens leave the nest in early August and thereafter the colony soon winds down.

How do wasps help wildlife?

As predators, they’re at the top of the food chain and without them food webs would break down. They help to keep other invertebrate populations, such as spiders, woodlice, and insects, in check.

They’re also generalists: wasps will feed on whatever’s around. They eat the most abundant pests that we try to control with toxic chemicals – there’d be many more aphids in my garden without wasps. We don’t have good data on how much wasps eat, but a single colony is thought to remove somewhere between 0.16-23kg of prey per season. Using a modest estimate, that amounts to about 250,000 aphids from each colony.