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Benevolent or fearsome? Yellowjackets can be both

Yellowjackets play a supportive role in gardening but can be dangerous around families and pets. People sensitive to bee venom should be especially careful from August through October, when yellowjacket numbers peak.

They attack when threatened, and are known to crash cookouts too.

"Yellowjackets, hornets and paper wasps are all beneficial predators of soft-bodied insects such as caterpillars, grubs and flies," said Heather Stoven, a horticulturist with Oregon State University Extension Service. "However, yellowjackets will often begin to scavenge late in the summer into fall as their typical food sources often become more limited.

"They begin to look for carrion (think your hamburger at a picnic) as well as sugary foods ... which can lead to increased negative encounters," Stoven said.

Yellowjackets deliver the insects and food they forage to the young in their nests, while nourishing themselves on nectar from flowers.

That makes them inadvertent pollinators, although they aren't as efficient as honeybees since their shiny bodies have little body hair where pollen can collect for transfer from plant to plant, Stoven said.

Yellowjackets typically live in underground burrows, although some species build paper nests elsewhere.

"Their nests are usually small and placed under protective overhangs on houses and garages," said James Dill, a pest management specialist with University of Maine Extension. "Where you run into a problem is when you're mowing the lawn and come across a ground nest. You don't usually see those until it's too late. Disturb those nests and they react terribly."

Yellowjackets are drawn to food and water, the latter particularly during droughts.

"Yards contain all kinds of potential food sources such as fallen fruits, which provide sugars, garbage, pet food and human food," Stoven said.

It's best to remove nests found in high-traffic areas, but do so carefully, she said. Probably the smartest option is calling in an exterminator.

If you do want to take on the job yourself, then use quick-acting, kill-on-contact insecticides labeled for yellowjackets that allow treatment from safe distances when aimed at nest entrances, Stoven said. Apply the insecticide when it's cool, and avoid using a flashlight, since wasps are attracted to light.

"Wear protective clothing that covers your skin," Stoven said. "If a nest is in a location that can be avoided, it could potentially be left undisturbed. The queen and workers will die off when cold weather arrives."

Traps, commercial or homemade, are another kind of management tool, although they're effective only in small areas and don't impact the nests where queens produce colonies sized anywhere from 1,000 to 5,000 wasps, said Susan Jones, a professor of entomology at The Ohio State University.

"Certain yellowjackets have been known to fly from 300 to 1,000 yards from their nest in search of food," Jones said. "Traps will not rapidly knock down yellowjacket populations. For effective use at outdoor events, traps should be placed out two or more days prior to the event."

Firewood piles also are frequent gathering places for yellowjackets, since they continue collecting nest material through summer, Dill said.

"They like split wood, not the bark," he said. "Keep the piles covered, which also keeps the wood nice and dry."

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Online:

For more about how to manage yellowjackets and wasps, see this homeowner's guide from University of Idaho Extension: www.extension.uidaho.edu/publishing/pdf/BUL/BUL0852.pdf

You can contact Dean Fosdick at deanfosdick@netscape.net

This image taken July 15, 2019, near Langley, Wash., shows a Yellowjacket trap strung on a fence near some honeybee hives. Yellowjackets will invade these productive hives, feeding on the stored honey, at season's end. Traps are effective but only in small areas and don't impact the nests where queens continue to produce colonies that can contain anywhere from 1,000 to 5,000 wasps. (Dean Fosdick via AP) The Associated Press
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