Yellow-vented Hornet

Vespa analis

"Vespa analis", the yellow-vented hornet, is a species of common hornet found in Southeast Asia.
Vespa analis - Yellow-Vented Hornet Hornets generally get a bad reputation, people thinking that the best is going to attack at any second. I know this all too well, as this was me up until just a few years ago. But I have learned that these bugs are simply not interested in me, unless I take an aggressive interest in them.

I have photographed fifty plus species of wasp, and the only time that I was stung was when I picked up a tiny fly off the pool table, as it was obstructing my shot. It turned out to be a wasp. Ironically, I was trying not to kill it.

The wasp in question, analis, is a social wasp and constructs a nest, starting with a single wasp. As the hatch progresses, the size of the nest is built on and can become sizeable.

The danger comes when you accidentally bump the tree containing the nest. You will be investigated, and if considered a threat, you will be stung. When you are attacked, the wasp gives off a pheromone which calls more wasps into the attack. More stings, more pheromones, and very soon, you have the entire nest on your case.

The sting is very painful, but only a problem if you have an allergy to the venom. Of course, if the nest attacks and you receive hundreds of stings, the sheer volume of venom will put you in danger.

Location is Bandung, West Java, Indonesia. Alongside a stream and paddy fields.
http://www.jungledragon.com/image/37715/vespa_analis_-_yellow-vented_hornet.html Austrolestes analis,Bandung,Fall,Geotagged,Indonesia,Java,Slender Ringtail,Vespa analis,West Java,analis,hornet,wasp,wasp nest

Appearance

This species varies in colours and patterns, in Southeast Asia, they are usually black with a yellow marking on the tip of the abdomen In Singapore, they are coloured slightly lighter, with red or brown heads and pronotums. Specimens from sub-tropical, mountainous or temperate areas have yellow heads. In areas where they occur with the Asian giant hornet, they tend to resemble a similar colour and pattern to the Asian Giant Hornet.
Yellow-vented hornet, Vespa Analis  Geotagged,Indonesia,Summer,Vespa analis

Distribution

This species is one of the most widely distributed hornets. It can be found in temperate areas such as Japan, Russia and Korea, and is also found over much of China and Taiwan, down to tropical regions like Singapore and Indonesia.
Vespa analis - Yellow-Vented Hornet I found this small analis nest hanging from a branch. I observed the wasp in and out, and established that it was a single wasp. The frequency of shot opportunities as mundanely slow, plus I wanted to see for myself, how aggressive the wasp was.

With a long stick, and standing well back, I very lightly tapped the branch. The wasp was out of the nest in a flash, scanning the area for the threat. WOA! Extremely aggressive! The wasp did not see me, and so soon returned to the nest.

Over the next few days, I used this very foolish technique to collect my images. The photographic settings were difficult, mostly under exposed. I was starting to make progress, when one day I arrived at the site and the nest was gone. The farmer had found it, and destroyed it. Fair enough, the nest was alongside the path, and eventually would have been a danger.

Location is Bandung, West Java, Indonesia. Alongside a stream and paddy fields.
http://www.jungledragon.com/image/37716/vespa_analis_-_yellow-vented_hornet.html Bandung,Fall,Geotagged,Indonesia,Java,Vespa analis,West Java,analis,wasp,wasp nest

Behavior

Vespa analis is a typical tree-dwelling hornet. Its nests are generally built from six to ten feet above ground, lower than those of "Vespa affinis" and "Vespa velutina". The nest envelope is usually quite dark and sturdy, and has a coarsely imbricate pattern, with large, obvious overlapping circular sections. In temperate areas, the nest gets only very slightly oval, and the colony size is generally not very large. However, nests in the tropics reach substantial sizes. There is also the same variation seen in nests of "Vespa affinis"; nests in tropical regions are tapered from the top and get wider further down.
Their diet is relatively similar to other hornet species of Southeast Asia, catching butterflies, honeybees and dragonflies. However, unlike some hornet species in Southeast Asia, they do not scavenge on dead animals or food left behind by people.

This species is generally considered to be one of the least defensive species. However, in Japan, it is responsible for quite a number of attacks, due to its abundance and its fondness for building near human habitation.This species appears to have a fairly long colony cycle, as workers have been spotted trying to hunt in early January, indicating that some nests still have brood or new queens then.

References:

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Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionArthropoda
ClassInsecta
OrderHymenoptera
FamilyVespidae
GenusVespa
SpeciesV. analis
Photographed in
Indonesia