Polistes fuscatus
Polistes fuscatus | |
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Polistes fuscatus from Quebec; lateral view | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Class: | Insecta |
Order: | Hymenoptera |
Family: | Vespidae |
Genus: | Polistes |
Species: | P. fuscatus |
Binomial name | |
Polistes fuscatus (Fabricius, 1793) | |
Synonyms | |
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Polistes fuscatus, whose common name is the golden or northern paper wasp, is widely found throughout southern Canada, the United States, and Central America.[2] It often nests around human development. However, it greatly prefers areas in which wood is readily available for use as nest material, therefore they are also found near and in woodlands and savannas.[3] The Polistes fuscatus is a social wasp that is part of a complex society based around a single dominant queen along with other cofoundresses and a dominance hierarchy.[3]
Taxonomy and phylogeny
Polistes fuscatus are a part of the order Hymenoptera, the suborder Apocrita, the family of Vespidae, and the subfamily Polistinae, the second largest subfamily within Vespidae, of which all are social wasps.[4][5] Polistinae comprises four tribes, including Polistini, Epiponini, Mischocyttarini, and Ropalidiini. It is characterized by two major behaviors: colony founding and reproductive dominance.[4] Colony founding can be either independent or swarm founding.[4] Independent founding consists of the founding of small, simple nests that are constructed without a paper envelope by a single or few queens with one or several inseminated egg-layers and no workers. Swarm founding includes the construction of large swarms and are founded by multiple queens with many workers.[4] Polistes fuscatus is part of the Polistini tribe and in the genus Polistes. Polistes is one of the five independent-founding groups. A study in which bootstrap analysis was conducted indicated that Polistes fuscatus is part of the new world subgenera: Fuscopolistes. In addition to Polistes fuscatus, within fuscopolistes are Polistes bellicosus, Polistes apaches, Polistes aurifer, Polistes Carolina, Polistes dorsalis, and Polistes metricus, all of which are the closest relatives to Polistes fuscatus.[4]
Description
The physical characteristics of the Polistes fuscatus are highly dependent on the geographic location of its habitat.[6] Throughout the United States, there are three color pattern trends that represent different regions throughout the country.[7] The male Polistes fuscatus is identified by its darkened apical flagellomeres in addition to its darkened dorsal surface of the apical flagellomeres that is common to other species of wasps.[6] Northern females on the other hand are easily identified by the blackening of their entire bodies which may or may not have markings of other colors.[8] Many southern Polistes fuscatus, however, have additional markings and may resemble wasps of other species.[6]
The facial and abdominal markings of Polistes fuscatus are highly variable. They include a variety of different patterns, such as small dots, long stripes, clypeus blotches, yellow abdominal dots, upper clypeus stripes, and combinations of both clypeus edge and tip colorations. Furthermore, some wasps have these facial and abdominal patterns in brown and black instead of yellow.[8] These markings colors, however, are often influenced by the geographic location of the wasp.[6]
The length of the Polistes fuscatus often ranges between 15 to 21 mm.[9] The fore wing length of the Polistes fuscatus ranges between 11.5 – 17.0 mm; in general, the fore wing of males is above 13.0 mm, whereas females have a fore wing length above 11.0.[6] Both males and females have rather slender bodies and have a waist that connects the thorax to the abdomen.[9] The female has a venomous sting.[9] With length and coloration also varies throughout the seasonal year of when the wasps emerge.[10]
Distribution and Habitat
Polistes fuscatus distribution ranges from southern Canada to the United States to Central America. The most northern range is Chilcotin, British Columbia, and reaches as far south as Honduras.[10] Although Polistes fuscatus prefer wooded areas for the readily available resources to build the nest, it also is often seen in areas in which humans inhabit. Nests are produced through using wood provided from their habitat masticated with fluid produced by Polistes fuscatus’s mouth to create a pulp like substance.[10]
However, another eusocial wasp species, namely Polistes dominula, has been recognized as a threat for the Polistes fuscatus. P. dominula has been displacing P. fuscatus at many of the formerly P. fuscatus-dominated areas. A study found that Polistes dominula was likely replacing Polistes fuscatus through indirect or exploitative competition, which was consistent with the finding that Polistes dominula was significantly more productive than Polistes fuscatus.[11]
Life Cycle
The life cycle lasts approximately one year.[12][13] In early spring the new queen emerging from hibernation starts a new colony, building an umbrella-shaped nest made of a papery material and suspended from a single stalk. The queen lays eggs into individual cells. The first generation is composed of infertile female workers. In the next generation there are multiple queens with communal nests, but the other fertile females accept the dominance of a single female and raise offspring cooperatively.[14][15] Later in summer, the next year's queens are produced, and they mate with males. The newly mated queens hibernate in winter, while old founding queens, workers (sterile females) and males die.[12][13]
Colony Cycle
Colony stages can be separated into three stages based on nest content: pre-emergence (nest initiation to first adult), emergence-enlargement (emergence of first adult to beginning brood decline), and post-enlargement (no further new cell addition). The total number of wasps in the colony can be well over 200.[10]
Prior to nest initiation, females come together post hibernation in clusters before separating and starting their own colonies in early spring. During this time, the wasps are particularly aggressive when other wasps encroach on their territory; this aggression may be associated with the development of their ovaries.[10] Nests are normally initiated by a single foundress during early May; however, if another foundress joins, the nest may be founded by several foundresses. In the early beginning of the founding of the nest, females exhibit much aggression in order to assert dominance to determine the hierarchical ranking; dominant females with exhibit oophagy and become queens.[10]
In the beginning of the pre-emergence stage, there are very few eggs in the nest.[16] The mean of the pre-emergence stage is approximately 48 days long; it includes the egg, larval and pupal stages and may also be affected by nutrition and temperature. The first eggs that are laid are all female workers that can care for future reproductive females.[16] After the first eggs are laid, both male and female eggs are laid until mid-September; the laying of male eggs has been shown to be correlated with increased oviposition rate of the dominant females. Post the birth of both male and female eggs, only female adults emerge, though eggs laid post the end of July no longer emerge and reach adulthood. The life cycle of the wasp is approximately one year. The queen disappears at the end of July, which is when the both the number of laid eggs and the rate at which the growth of the nest declines, though other reproductive females may continue to lay eggs. The brood itself begins to decline towards late August, thus leading to the conclusion that brood declination occurs when the there is no longer the occurrence of reproduction.[10] After reaching the post-enlargement behavior, brood destruction occurs in which wasps begin exhibiting abortive behavior by either throwing larva out or feeding them to existing nest mates; if not aborted, these larvae eventually emerge as abnormal adults. Post this destruction, the adult wasps abandon the nests. Prior to hibernation, the wasps cluster together in aggregations to mate and then begin hibernation till the next season.[10]
Behavior
Polistes fuscatus is an eusocial organism that has a hierarchical social system usually centered around one queen. Although this species is classified as eusocial, its social organization is not as evolved as other eusocial organisms. Queen initiated interactions can be placed into two broad categories: (1) solicitations and (2) non-solicitations. Solicitations include “receipt of water, nectar, pulp, or prey from returned Foragers,” while non-solicitations include, “antennation, lunging/bumping, chasing, grappling, and biting” (156). Queens spend substantially less time off of the nest compared to workers. Workers vary significantly in time spent off the nest, which correlates with foraging efforts. More dominant workers spend less time off of the nest compared with less dominant workers.[17] Other eusocial insects, such as soldier termites, have developed guard polymorphs that specialize in nest defense. Paper wasps on the other hand, have only workers and queens who defend the nest together.[18] The queen is the most aggressive defender of the nest since she has the most reproductive investment.[19] In some cases, Polistes fuscatus has been shown to share nests with a closely related species, Polistes metricus.[20]
Dominance
Polistes fuscatus have a linear dominance hierarchy that revolves around the fertility of each individual wasp; those who are more dominant within the nest generally have the larger or more developed ovaries.[10] The hierarchy is first formed in the pre-emergence period between foundresses in which they fight aggressively to establish dominance until the hierarchy is established and only later formed among the workers of the colony such that they are integrated into the hierarchy.[10] When the queen is removed, the second highest ranking female then takes the queen place in being the primary egg layer.[10]
The posture of wasps is very telling of which is dominant or subordinate. The dominant wasp generally sits higher than the subordinate, whereas the subordinates have a lower stance.[10] For wasps that are of equal rank, it is not uncommon for them to continuously try to rise higher and begin to aggressively fight each other until they fall due to losing their foothold.[10] This is often called the falling fight, though it is more common for one wasp to act as a subordinate.[10]
Dominance ranking may also affect the location females may be at within the nest and how far away wasps are spaced. In Polistes fuscatus, those who are higher on the dominance ranking will make continuous darts at other lower ranking wasps such that other wasps will not closely sit near the higher ranking wasp.[10]
Nest Recognition
Members of a colony are able to recognize non-resident wasps by how they approach the nest and by their dominance behavior.[10] Members of the colony will approach the nest in a swift and purposeful fashion, whereas wasps that are not part of the colony will hover by the nest and not exhibit a specific direction.[10] Oftentimes, they will hover by the nest without landing. If spotted, members of the colony will begin to act aggressively and alarm others of the possible intruder.[10] It has been indicated that non-resident wasps are often chased out of the nest within the first five minutes of entering a nest.[10]
On occasion, however, resident wasps may mistake other resident wasps as non-resident wasps.[10] This occurs when the mistaken wasp has just come back from foraging and is too full to obtain the velocity necessary to fly towards the nest as if it were a resident of the nest. Sometimes, in order to obtain the speed necessary, the wasp will attempt to approach the nest several times.[10] Dominance relations also allow for members to recognize nest mates as each wasp is of a particular rank; when a non-resident arrives and has no dominance rank, it is conceived as being unfamiliar. Wasps that are not part of the colony are only accepted without aggression when there is not yet a dominance hierarchy or conflict.[8][10]
Individual Recognition
Individual recognition is highly important in the formation of behavioral interactions between members of different castes within a population of Polistes fuscatus.[8] The ability to recognize individuals is vital for the existence of a linear dominance hierarchy, in which is a determinant for many aspects of behavior of the paper wasp, including the amount of food and work an individual wasp would be able to have or need to accomplish, the amount of aggression one may receive, and the amount of children a specific wasp may produce.[8] The ability to recognize individuals also helps dictate how one wasp may treat another, whether it be to hold a dominant role or to act submissively within an interaction.[8]
Much evidence has indicated that Polistes fuscatus have the capability to not only recognize where wasps of their population may fall in the hierarchy but may also be able to recognize individual nest-mates through specific facial and abdominal markings.[8] One study indicated that if the facial and abdominal markings of a wasp were to be changed through painting with different color paints, mainly black or yellow, when the wasp was reintroduced into the nest, it would receive much aggression until it was reaccepted back into the colony (i.e. when the nest-mates felt familiar with that wasp).[8] The study was able to indicate that recognition was specific to the individual given that there was no relationship between specific markings and dominance rank, rather markings were purely used for individual recognition.[8] Furthermore, previous research by Bura and Gamboa indicated that wasps use chemical cues to identify nest-mates and wasps that are foreign to the nest would be immediately chased away within the first five minutes. That the reintroduced wasps were not chased away is a strong indication that facial and abdominal patterns are not used for net-mate recognition but is only used for individual recognition.[8]
The ability to recognize individuals may not only be useful for behavioral interaction, but may also be used to reduce aggressive interaction between individuals of different dominance ranks, as well as to help foundresses determine and regulate the amount of resources each individual within the nest receives.[8]
Colony Defense
A greater part in the division of labor in colony defense is given to the queen of the colony.[21] Research by Fishwild and Gamboa have indicated that queens come into contact and interact with non-resident wasps and returning nest-mates more compared to other resident wasps and are the first to come into contact with the wasp intruders at a much higher rate. Although this finding could be attributed to the queen’s location preference of being at the face of the nest, it was found that even normalizing for the preferred location, queens still encountered non nest mates at a higher rate than expected.[21] In addition, queen wasps are much less tolerant of non-resident and returning nest mates compared to non-queen nest mates; however, both the queen and the colony members become less tolerant of non-resident wasps later on during the colony cycle.[21]
It is hypothesized that queens may be less tolerant of intruders compared to other colony members due the consequences of accepting non nest mates into the colony.[21] Oftentimes, female intruders that join the colony will attempt to evict the previous queen and usurp the position. Whereas this result is harmful for the queen, other members of the nest are not negatively impacted; they would simply remain in the nest and serve the new queen.[21] Therefore, much of the defense of the colony is left up to the queen.[21]
Colony Defense Against Vertebrate Predators
Polistes fuscatus invest much in their nests.[16] Nests provide locations that members of the colony can return to and act as a central location that can allow for more efficient work in reproduction and foraging behavior.[16] Although nests can provide many benefits, it also has the disadvantage of concentrating all investment in one area; this concentration allows for vertebrate predators to have the ability to destroy an entire nest and therefore destroy all investment. Vertebrate predators of Polistes fuscatus include the following organisms: foxes, rodents, and birds.[16] Judd’s study on the defensive behavior of colonies of the paper wasp indicated that the behavior of wasps was highly dependent on reproductive investment.[16] Prior to the emergence of many adult wasps, the wasps acted much more aggressively; however, when the nest no longer contained any brood and, therefore, not much investment, the wasps were much more likely to flee instead of act aggressively against the vertebrate predator.[16]
Foraging Behavior
Edwards indicated in his work that social wasps, “collect water, plant fibers, and carbohydrates, and hunt arthropod prey or scavenge animal proteins.” [22] Water is used for the following processes: nest cooling, construction, and metabolism; plant fibers are used for construction, and carbohydrates and protein is used as food and energy.[5] Water is a vital resource for wasps given its many capabilities, and many wasps will go to a variety of places to obtain it, such as puddles and ponds, or even drinking fountains and faucets.[5] Wasps are able to obtain water by imbibing it and regurgitating it once they return to the nest and are able to use it for construction by mixing it with the masticated plant fibers.[5] These plant fibers are collected from dead wood. By mixing the plant fibers with water, wasps are able to create pulp which is then used to help the construction of nests.[5]
Polistes fuscatus is considered to be a generalist prey forager but may also act as a specialist due to its habit of commonly returning to a specific location or to prey on the same species.[5] They use the scavenged animal protein from both vertebrates and arthropods such as: caterpillars, flies, alate ants, termites, spiders, bees, and other wasps to help the development of their brood.[5] Social wasps collect carbohydrates from nectar, sap, and fruits and may store them within the nest; some wasps may even steal or consume carbohydrates from other carbohydrate foraging or making arthropods.[5] Although the foraging of social wasps is not as developed as some other arthropod species’ given its weakness in recruitment, the ability to communicate to nest mates of the location of a resource stronghold, it may be impactful to the greater ecosystem.[5]
Diet
Polistes fuscatus eat arthropod prey, animal proteins, carbohydrates and protein. They will eat caterpillars, flies, ants, termites, spiders, bees, and other wasps. Carbohydrates may include nectar, sap, and fruits.[5]
Differential Egg Eating
Egg laying by subordinate females and the oophagy of these eggs by dominate female wasps will occur until two weeks after the first female eggs emerge.[10] Prior to these two weeks, egg layers will continuously eat other female wasps’ eggs approximately eleven minutes post being laid; however, no egg layers would ever eat their own eggs, indicating that they could recognize their own individual eggs.[10] It can be conjectured that subordinate egg layers could not lay eggs as quickly as dominate egg layers given the dominate egg layers’ greater supply of ova from the subordinate egg layers indicating that oophagy and oviposition occur close together.[10] Previous studies have also shown that subordinate egg layers’ may no longer lay eggs after associating with the higher ranking females after a certain time period; this is probably due to the necessity of expending energy during foraging and inability to invest as much into their own eggs.[10]
Sexual Behavior
Mating
Prior to hibernation, males and females will undergo mating; they will aggregate together in sunlit areas that are relatively higher in location.[10] Males will sit out waiting to pursue females in order to mate.[10] Once a female is spotted, unlike the usual passive male within the nest, the sexually responsive male will attempt to mount the female and begin performing abdominal stroking. Females will react aggressively in order to struggle free.[10] If the female were to elude the male’s hold, the male wasp would return to its position to attempt to copulate again. While copulating, the male exhibits several movements, such as abdominal stroking, extrusion of genitals, grasping the female abdomen, rhythmic antennal vibrations, and grasping of the female antennae.[10] Antennas and antennal movement are important for copulation. Some studies have indicated that females without antenna and females who do not depress their antennae cannot copulate. It has also been proposed that antennal movements help copulation through assisting the attachment of genitals.[10] In addition, research by Post and Jeanne has shown that Polistes fuscatus females have no preference on mating with related or unrelated males.[23]
Reproduction
The mating season for Polistes fuscatus is during the spring and summer, after the nest has been abandoned. Venom is released by females that contains a sex pheromone that induces copulatory behavior in males. The continual release of the venom causes males to try to copulate with females when they are unreceptive on the nest, thus interrupting the activities of the colony.[24] After mating has occurred, the queen will lay an initial generation of infertile female workers. Later on in the life of the nest, male and fertile female offspring are produced.
The eggs capable of becoming queens are laid during the summer. Laying these eggs during the summer ensures that the larvae are well-fed due to the great environmental conditions and abundance of food. These eggs hatch before fall and the resulting offspring hibernate during fall and winter.[18] The new queens or co-foundresses emerge in the spring to begin new nests and lay eggs. After laying eggs that will later develop into new queens, the old queens die along with all accompanying workers and males. As opposed to other eusocial insects such as vespid wasps, Polistes fuscatus have not been found to preferentially mate with their siblings or have sibling recognition mechanisms to aid in kin selection during reproduction.[25] This is surprising since there are many advantages of inbreeding for haplo-diploid organisms.[25]
Sex Allocation
According to Fisher’s theory of sex ratio selection, when competition for mates is population wide, parents will evolve to invest equally in both sexes.[19] However in eusocial hierarchies, there is often conflict between the workers and the queen to promote their genes within the colony. The Queens favors a 1:1 sex ratio, but the workers favor female progeny because they share approximately 75% (r=0.75) of their genes with their sisters, provided that the queen only mated once.[26] In Polistes fuscatus, the sex ratio is usually 1:1 for several reasons. First, males generally leave the nest to scout for mates soon after they reach adulthood, promoting population competition for mates. Second, the number of workers within a colony is relatively small (generally less than 40) making it less likely for a worker to confront the queen. Also, since colonies are annual and workers are reared by the queen’s subordinate foundresses, the queen can manipulate how much food they receive as larvae. Polistes fuscatus queens likely mate with multiple males so that the relatedness of workers is less than if they all shared the same father’s genes. Finally, in the second generation of the queens offspring, males are usually reared earlier than reproductive females. Thus when the workers have the opportunity to bias the sex ratio, there are few male larvae present. Additionally, the males have usually completed part of their development, giving them a higher reproductive value than new eggs. Thus the costs of destroying male larvae or replacing the male larvae with their own eggs is not worth the investment.[19]
References
- ↑ Global species
- ↑ Metcalf, R.A.; J.C. Marlin; and G. S. Whitt. (1984). Genetics of Speciation within the Polistes fuscatus Species Complex. The Journal of Heredity 117-20. Print.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Evans, H. (1963). Wasp Farm. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 Arevalo, Elisabeth, Yong Zhu, James Carpenter, and Joan Strassmann. (2004). The Phylogeny of the Social Wasp Subfamily Polistinae: Evidencefrom Microsatellite Flanking Sequences, Mitochondrial COIsequence, and Morphological Characters. BMC Evolutionary Biology Web. 21 Sept. 2014. <http://www.academia.edu/1152832/The_phylogeny_of_the_social_wasp_subfamily_Polistinae_evidence_from_microsatellite_flanking_sequences_mitochondrial_COI_sequence_and_morphological_characters>.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 5.7 5.8 5.9 Richter, M. Raveret. (2000). Social Wasp (Hymenoptera: Vespidae) Foraging Behavior. Annual Review of Entomology 121-50. Web. 22 Sept. 2014. <http://www.annualreviews.org/doi/pdf/10.1146/annurev.ento.45.1.121>.
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 Buck, Matthias. (2008). Identification Atlas of the Vespidae (Hymenoptera, Aculeata) of the Northeastern Nearctic Region. Canadian Journal of Arthropod Identification Web. 21 Sept. 2014. <http://www.biology.ualberta.ca/bsc/ejournal/bmc_05/77p_fuscatus.html>.
- ↑ MacLean, Bonnie, Leland Chandler, and David Maclean. (1978). PHENOTYPIC EXPRESSION IN THE PAPER WASP. The Great Lakes Entomologist 2.2 Web. 21 Sept. 2014. <http://insects.ummz.lsa.umich.edu/mes/gle-pdfs/vol11no2.pdf#page=26>.
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 8.5 8.6 8.7 8.8 8.9 8.10 Tibbetts, Elizabeth A. (2002). Visual Signals Of Individual Identity In The Wasp Polistes fuscatus. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 1423-428. Print.
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 9.2 Milne, L. (1980). The Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Insects and Spiders. New York: Knopf.
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 10.4 10.5 10.6 10.7 10.8 10.9 10.10 10.11 10.12 10.13 10.14 10.15 10.16 10.17 10.18 10.19 10.20 10.21 10.22 10.23 10.24 10.25 10.26 10.27 10.28 10.29 10.30 West-Eberhard, M.J. (1969). The social biology of polistine wasps. Mis. Publ.Zool. Univ. Michigan 140, 1-101
- ↑ Gamboa, G.J.; Greig, E.I.; Thom, M.C. (2002). "The comparative biology of two sympatric paper wasps, the native Polistes fuscatus and the invasive Polistes dominulus (Hymenoptera, Vespidae)". Insectes Soc 49: 45–49. doi:10.1007/s00040-002-8278-y.
- ↑ 12.0 12.1 Bugguide
- ↑ 13.0 13.1 Polistes fuscatus on Animal Diversity
- ↑ "Like Humans, the Paper Wasp Has a Special Talent for Learning Faces"
- ↑ National Geographic
- ↑ 16.0 16.1 16.2 16.3 16.4 16.5 16.6 Judd, T. M. (1998). Defensive Behavior of Colonies of the Paper Wasp, Polistes fuscatus, against Vertebrate Predators over the Colony Cycle." Insectes Sociaux 197-208. Web. 22 Sept. 2014. <http://download.springer.com/static/pdf/634/art%3A10.1007%2Fs000400050080.pdf?auth66=1411585357_ec0c73b74257a665313e9b6ca048aab9&ext=.pdf>.
- ↑ Reeve, Hudson K.; George J. Gamboa (1987). "Queen Regulation of Worker Foraging in Paper Wasps: A Social Feedback Control System (Polistes fuscatus, Hymenoptera: Vespidae)". Behaviour 102 (3-4): 147–167. doi:10.1163/156853986x00090.
- ↑ 18.0 18.1 Klahn, J. (May 19, 1988). "Intraspecific Comb Usurpation in the Social Wasp Polistes fuscatus". Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 23 (1): 1–8. doi:10.1007/bf00303051. Retrieved 17 September 2013.
- ↑ 19.0 19.1 19.2 Noonan, Katherine (March 24, 1978). . "Sex Ratio of Parental Investment in Colonies of the Social Wasp Polistes fuscatus". Science, New Series 199 (4335): 1354–1356. doi:10.1126/science.199.4335.1354. Retrieved 17 September 2013.
- ↑ Gamboa, George J. (1981). Nest Sharing and Maintenance of Multiple Nests by the Paper Wasp, Polistes Metricus. Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society 54.1 153-55. Print
- ↑ 21.0 21.1 21.2 21.3 21.4 21.5 Fishwild, Thomas, and George Gamboa. "Colony Defence against Conspecifics: Caste-specific Differences in Kin Recognition by Paper Wasps, Polistes Fuscatus." Animal Behavior (1991): 95-102. Print.
- ↑ Edwards R. (1980). Social Wasps: Their Biology and Control. Sussex, UK: Rentokil. 398 pp.
- ↑ Post, David C., and Robert L. Jeanne.(1983). Relatedness and mate selection in Polistes fuscatus(Hymenoptera: Vespidae). Animal behaviour 31.4:1260-1261.
- ↑ Post, David; Robert Jeanne (1983). "Venom: Source of a Sex Pheromone in the Social Wasp Polistes fuscatus (Hymenoptera: Vespidae)". Journal of Chemical Ecology 9 (2): 259–266. doi:10.1007/bf00988043.
- ↑ 25.0 25.1 Larch, Christine; George Gamboa (1981). "Investigation of Mating Preference for Nestmates in the Paper Wasp Polistes fuscatus (Hymenoptera: Vespidae)". Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society 54 (4): 811–814. Retrieved 16 September 2013.
- ↑ Krebs, John; Nicholas Davies & Stuart West (2012). An Introduction to Behavioral Ecology (4 ed.). Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 978-1-4051-1416-5.
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