Little did I know, as I labored in
my vegetable garden this summer, that I was working under a potential
disaster. Not 12 feet over my head hung a huge hornets’ nest.
Overhead all summer long. |
Now that the leaves are falling,
hidden treasures are revealing themselves in the trees we have
lingered near all season. Walk along a favorite trail and look
around. It is a new view. Nests that protected wildlife of all kinds
are now becoming visible. Most nests are seasonal only; their
creators have long deserted them and will not return the next year.
This is only partly true of the makers of these lovely, large paper
globe hornet nests.
The White-faced or Bald-faced
hornets (Dolichovespula maculate) are relatives of Yellow jackets
we may be more familiar with. They are protective, aggressive and
deliver a painful sting. At the end of the summer season, a hive
like this can contain an average of 400-500 individuals. Never mess
with a nest! You irritate one, you activate all. As the weather
turns chilly the hornets become slower and go dormant, but if you
were to find one of these nests on the ground now, and think to bring
it indoors for examination, you could be in for a nasty surprise. The
warmth may awaken the occupants and you could end up with a house
full of angry hornets.
White-faced hornet. Photo by Patty O'Hearn Kickham from Flickr. |
The winter winds will rip and tear
it apart, the hornets will die, but each year we have more. It is an
interesting cycle. At the end of the summer, each hive can have
produced several new queens. They are fertilized by specially raised
males. Before the cold sets in, these new queens leave the nest and
by this time in November, they can be found under rotting logs in the
woods. There they hibernate until spring.
When the weather warms again, the
new queens emerge from hibernation and disperse, each finding a new
nest site. She begins creating a nest of a few cells and lays the
eggs she carried all winter. She tends and feeds the larva until
they become ready drones to begin the work of building and tending
the nest. Each succeeding generation of workers goes out and chews
wood products, bark, twigs, decks and siding as well. When they mix
the wood pulp with their saliva, they then spread it out in bands
onto the existing hive making it larger and creating more combs
within. The combs can be 5-7 deep and up to 10 inches in diameter.
A Papier-Mache’ project and a home for hundreds as well! It is
truly a work of art, shades of grays and browns overlaid and
combined. Amazing.
Small chamber of the queen's first nest. |
More chambers added into the comb. |
New eggs are laid within the cells.
These hornets do not store food, or make honey in their paper combs.
It is strictly for egg and larva development. The adult workers go
out and feed on a number of things, including nectar, but also other
insects which they bring back to the nest, chew up and deliver to the
larvae or queen!
A work of art. |
As the season progresses and the
hive grows, you can often witness the activity from afar, if you can
find the nest. Even birds stay away from an active hive. Some mammals
are persistent enough to go after the hive to eat the larva within.
But the positioning, way out on a delicate limb, often thwarts even the
most determined.
It is the cold season now. The
queens have left. Any remaining larvae or adults are dormant or dead.
The gray paper nests hang more visibly over trails and at woodland
edges. This morning I watched as two Tufted Titmice attacked the one
over my garden. They ripped at the outer layers. One went in and out
of the entrance hole. They were feasting on those inside that
were doomed anyway. And so the cycle continues.
A project for the birds now. |
Written by Beth Sullivan. Unless otherwise indicated, photographs by Beth Sullivan.
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