How can you tell their nests apart? Where do they live? Should you have one or both in your backyard garden? What should you do if you have either? What provokes them into stinging? What do they eat? We’ll look at their differences below.
Comparing Honey Bee vs Yellow Jacket
6 Key Differences Between Honey Bees and Yellow Jackets:
1. Physical appearance:
Color differences will jump out at you before anything else. A Honey Bee has a dull off-yellow that is like an amber or golden-brown color alternating with black stripes, and a Yellow Jacket, true to its name, has a bright yellow “jacket” that dominates the black base. They are about the same length, so the next thing to look at is physical features. A Honey Bee has a round body with fuzzy hairs, wide wings, and flat hind legs for carrying pollen, but a Yellow Jacket has a slender body and wings, a thin waist, and a white or yellow face.
2. Taxonomy:
Bees are related to wasps and ants, and a wasp is related to bees and ants. A Yellow Jacket is a type of predatory native wasp and along with the Honey Bee is in the large winged insect order Hymenoptera that includes sawflies and ants.
3. Nest:
Another difference is how and where they make their homes. Honey Bees create wax hives for their colonies in hidden places such as rock crevices and hollow trees, but they’ll also take to honey bee boxes. They re-use the hives. Yellow Jacket nests are underground, in wall voids, eaves, dense vegetation, or woodpiles with camouflage over the entrance, and they only use them once.
4. Behavior:
The Honey Bee is eusocial, and the Yellow Jacket is also social. But whereas the Honey Bee will only sting when it’s threatened — such as being accidentally bumped into — it doesn’t take much, at all, to provoke a Yellow Jacket. Yellow Jackets are highly territorial and aggressive and can sting multiple times, but a Honey Bee can only sting once, with its internally attached stinger pulling out its guts. One reason the Yellow Jacket attacks is because they get “hangry.” In the late summer and early fall, their food supply has greatly diminished. The insects of spring have died off, leaving the Yellow Jacket desperate and angry. Approach a Yellow Jacket in springtime, however, and they will appear more relaxed.
5. Diet:
Both of these winged insects forage for nectar. However, the Honey Bee also forages for pollen. While the Yellow Jacket is mainly predatory and consumes beetle grubs, flies, and other insects, it is also attracted to trash and nearby food and drink, searching for meat and sweets.
6. Benefit:
There are unique benefits to each winged insect. Honey Bees are very busy pollinators of flowers and are important for the environment. Yellow Jackets do some pollinating, but their focus is serving as pest control.
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A big one! A Honey Bee and a Yellow Jacket are in different families and have physical differences. The Yellow Jacket is highly aggressive and predatory, serving as pest control, whereas the Honey Bee is generally gentle and only forages to collect nectar and pollinate flowers. A Yellow Jacket makes its nest in holes, and a Honey Bee makes a wax hive for the colony. Someone who is allergic to one is not commonly allergic to the other because their venom has different allergen components, although some people are allergic to both.