




“Aerial Yellowjacket” is a bit unfortunate for a term, because the most common Dolichovespula wasp we have here is the Bald-faced Hornet (Dolichovespula maculate), which is black and white:


Starting out from Brooklyn, an amateur naturalist explores our world. "The place to observe nature is where you are."—John Burroughs
“Aerial Yellowjacket” is a bit unfortunate for a term, because the most common Dolichovespula wasp we have here is the Bald-faced Hornet (Dolichovespula maculate), which is black and white:
There is a paper wasp nest in Central Park with the silhouette of an owl. Could this be intentional deception by the wasps to protect the nest from predators(tanagers and cuckoos), or just a fluke of this year’s nest?
I read that someone is knitting fake hornet nests and hanging them in trees, supposedly to deter actual hornet nests. Don’t know if it works.
I saw two of these nests in the same tree recently, perhaps 15-20 feet apart, so I don’t think they’d be impressed by a knit one.
Is a fake hornet a micro military drone? If so, they aren’t allowed in NYC parks.