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Discover Nature: Bald-Faced Hornet Nests

A large, round, gray bald-faced hornet nest hangs form a tree branch with green leaves around it.
After leaves fall, look up into trees for large, round, papery nests of bald-faced hornets. Each colony of these social wasps dies as weather turns cold, leaving only new queens to overwinter and build new colonies in the spring.

Discover Nature in the Missouri woods this week and scan leafless trees for the gray nests of bald-faced hornets.

These wasps chew wood, mix it with starches in their saliva, and use this substance to make their nests, which consist of layered, horizontal comb, enclosed by an outer envelope. 

Each colony of these social wasps lasts only one year, with new nests built annually. 

In spring, a single overwintered queen begins each nest.  Through the summer she lays eggs and builds her colony as they hatch and mate, producing infertile female workers, male drones, and new queens. 

As temperatures drop and autumn begins, new queens find a protected place to hibernate outside the nest. 

By winter, the whole colony of hornets dies, leaving only the fertilized queens to emerge in spring and begin building new colonies. 

Adult bald-faced hornets provide ecological benefits as pollinators, and hunt many types of insects and spiders. 

They’re generally not aggressive away from their nests, which are typically high off the ground and pose little problem for people. 

Learn more about Missouri’s native bald-faced hornets, see images of inside their nests, and find other things to watch for in the fall woods with the Missouri Department of Conservation’s online field guide.

Discover Nature is sponsored by the Missouri Department of Conservation.

Kyle Felling was born in the rugged northwest Missouri hamlet of St. Joseph (where the Pony Express began and Jesse James ended). Inspired from a young age by the spirit of the early settlers who used St. Joseph as an embarkation point in their journey westward, Kyle developed the heart of an explorer and yearned to leave for adventures of his own. Perhaps as a result of attending John Glenn elementary school, young Kyle dreamed of becoming an astronaut, but was disheartened when someone told him that astronauts had to be good at math. He also considered being a tow truck driver, and like the heroes of his favorite childhood television shows (The A-Team and The Incredible Hulk) he saw himself traveling the country, helping people in trouble and getting into wacky adventures. He still harbors that dream.
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