The spider, terrified hides in the only corner he can stay in...He kept bugs from getting in this mans house for years....In his final moments... "Help Me!!!"....but he can't hear you, little spider. He watches as the man he swore to protect all these years watched him die, doing nothing but video tape it. Silence from the spider, as he stares into his masters eyes with tears full. As he's being eaten away...The only words formed from his tiny mouth is....."why".....
That’s Mother Nature that wasp paralyze the spider then take it back to its hole then lays eggs inside the spider the the larva eats the spider alive from the inside
Facts lmao at the end of the day the only spiders I don't try and kill are daddy long legs. Fuck this thing and that other thing. Also I'm not risking myself getting stung or having both a scared spider and a angry wasp roaming my home. Rip spider boi wish it didn't have to be this way lol
But the wasp is just trying to feed its young you know. It lays eggs on the dead spider so its larvae can eat it. The spider becomes food for the larvae so they can grow, and pupate into a full grown wasp
The spider being aware of it’s imminent death and not bothering to escape, but still trying to hold onto what remains of its home is depressing as hell...
Humans dont have to Hunt for food and they have the equipment for killing anything in thier Way and insects most of the Time either Hunt for prey or they are the prey
Poor spider.... I must admit, that spider is a hell of a fighter. When you see lions take down prey, the prey seems to give up so fast, but this spider did not make it easy for that wasp!
The spider is an animal; the wasp is an insect. Hard to feel right about an insect taking an animal down but higher animals are killed by lower life forms all the time...
This isn't a tarantula hawk. They have red wings and a blue abdomen. There are hundreds of wasp species that hunt spiders (the entire family Pompilidae for example, called "spider wasps" because all those species hunt spiders).
Jokes on the spider. That guy she ate after mating with him had herpes from the other gal who didn't murder him knowing the herpes she just gave him would get him eventually.
This is 2021. That line should be " The jokes on you wasp. That spider has Covid and wasn't wearing a mask and you didn't want to do social distancing.
Weaver types are spiders are a home and gardens best friend. Don't be afraid of them. They are very docile. Now, recluses and other venomous fear biters, on the other hand, should RIP ASAP.
For all you, the spider will basically feel the equivalent of a machete stabbing into your body, but at a split second, the spider is paralyzed and then dies with wasp larvae.
@Brett Houle What makes you think insects and arachnids have no nervous systems? Of course they do. They couldn't function otherwise. They can sense temperature fluctuations, they have hairs all over them that can detect the faintest of air currents and they can feel the vibrations of the tramp of tiny insect feet. It's absurd, given all that, to assume they can't feel pain. Incidentally, eyes require the presence of a nervous system in order for a creature to see with them; most spiders have six or eight of them depending on species: clear evidence of a brain.
@Brett Houle Another interesting little bonus fact: There is evidence that even without a nervous system as we understand it, even plants can feel pain. It seems strange, but it makes a kind of sense. Pain is a survival mechanism; that's how our bodies tell us that something is wrong.
Wasps can act without a warrant but only in their own district, this wasp is clearly a rebel and must face disciplinary action immediately after this unlawful seizure. She'll be on nest duty until internal affairs has finished investigating this matter.
“Why are we still here? Just to suffer? Every night, I can feel my eight legs...and my arms...even my thorax. The body I’ve lost, the cobwebs I’ve lost. Won’t stop hurting.”
Wasp help pollinate and control piest like mites and plagues like cu' if thier were no wasp bro every fucking tree or plant you would pass by will fill you up with mites and other types of plagues everything serves a purpose in life even us so wasp are benefical insects
u won't wasp hunts spiders everyday, when u see them flying around your windows they are looking for spiders, and will even go into the web and pull him out, wasp are much too quick for a spider
PhrenicDemand that's like finding a giant centipede win against a grasshopper mouse. Only time you'll ever see a spider fight a wasp is a feeding video. As long as wasps have negative relations to spiders they always win
Sir, as the legal representative of the family of Mr. Spider, I'm sending you a subpoena for this footage to be used as evidence in the trial of Spider v. Wasp. Your cooperation is greatly appreciated.
That looks like the black and yellow mud dauber (Sceliphron caementarium) a type of Spider hunting wasp that paralyzes its victims to be used as food for their offspring. They can keep about 25 paralyzed spiders in each of their nest cells for each egg, which look like mounds of mud hanging from ceilings. They are quite docile and rarely stings unless handled roughly by a human.
Yep I got a nest right outside one of my windows that’s gotten pretty decently sized. Fascinating watching them carry spiders in, but a little unnerving to think those spiders are paralyzed and either starve to death or get eaten alive. Nature’s brutal.
That is a black and yellow mud dauber. They are actually pretty chill and rarely sting humans. You could actually probably pick one up without it singing you. They hunt spiders to feed their babies in their mud nests and are a solitary species. In my opinion there one of the species of wasps that aren't evil and are pretty friendly.
@@AttaMan no u Wally! But did u know, these solitary wasps sting their victims to paralyse them, drag them into a burrow, lay an egg inside the bug, then the baby wasp eats the paralysed bug whilst it’s still alive? Yet this guy said they weren’t evil and friendly!
Thanks for the info! This species made nests in our house multiple times. We obviously didn't want a wasp nest in our kitchen, so I took the nest down and there were many dead spiders inside the nest and bee larvae (I guess) crawling around in there. After that incident, a wasp (same wasp?) wanted to build another nest inside the house but we didn't bother that nest. There was traffic going in and out of the house. The wasp brought the dead spiders it hunted inside the house to build its nest. It would fly right past our heads all the time and we got used to it. After a while though, we never saw the wasp. I never checked the nest. Did the young bees fly out? Or are they in a pupae state or something? I don't know.
@@mindless_8751 brazilian is a technique/type of jiu jitsu i think. Not sure which but Brazilian being in the name has nothing to do with geographical location.
I was waiting for that spider to calmly strategically and methodically strike!!!!! AAAAAHHHHH!!!! aaannnnd no. You let me down spider, you let me down. RIP Homie
1 Sub before 2020 ends? Tbh that punk arse wasp was invading a home and if that was my home you’d have to kill me to get me to move camp with pride ignore the hate that spider was small and bullied get his momma bird eating spider up there let’s see wins
I have encountered these types of thin-thorax wasp where I used to live, they are likely in the dauber family...and obviously related to the Pepsis Wasp due to the clearly evident behavioral patterns and the way they sting from below with that insanely flexible thorax and abdomen. They're surprizingly pretty docile, non-agressive wasps for the most part...they're only really hostile towards spiders. Gruesome, but quite the site to behold. Though I can't stand wasps and hornets, it's still fascinating to observe them in their natural settings.
@Cody Lynn Thread-waisted wasp is a mud dauber wasp which prey on caterpillars and other insects besides spiders. But they are not in Pepsinadae family. Dauber wasps are in either of two other wasp families called the Specinae or Crabronidae. The Pepsis wasps are in Pompilidae family which includes the Tarantula hawk wasp. They are in fact over 5000 identified spider wasp species in the world divided up into six sub families which are all under the Family Pompilidae.
I'm pretty sure the wasp was laying his eggs in the spiders paralyzed body because the spider needs to be alive to keep the eggs warm well that's what trantula Hawk bees do to tarantulas
if you destroy the mud-dauber wasp nest you find plenty of those small spiders with a bigger “belly” . my boyfriend had two nests fumed on our land and when we took it apart each chamber was filled with a couple of small spiders.Worst thing i ever saw
the worst part is, is this is a mud dauber. they dont sting humans, they have stingers but they dont sting. he could have saved the spider the whole time
@@justinoppermann3997 yea its "nature" but that doesn't mean he cam interfere Like this person literally recorded. Death for views :/ Not saying that bugs are better than us. Im saying ita cold and i wouod hate to live with sombody like that
Nahhh I ain't gonna deal with a wasp nope I'll let the spider die. XD No stinging. Plus we humans interfere way too much in the natural world with our bleeding heart morality. .. And then destroy it for our gain... Yeah we're very backwards.
That wasn't a fair fight at all. The wasp was considerably bigger, faster, had thicker limbs and had much bigger mandibles. Plus, Orb Weaver spiders are classed as non aggressive and are not deadly. Poor spider...
At first i sided With the spider hoping it could pull off a miracle but then I realized how much time and energy the wasp was using for its meal/host for eggs and decided all is fair in love and war
This is a Ammophilinae, one of several species that are collectively called Mud Dauber Wasps, as the make multichambered nests of Mud Tubes! In each chamber an egg is laid, a live but paralyzed Spider or other meal is placed and then, the chamber is sealed! Once "found",the Spider had nearly NO Chance of escaping her fate! She apparently had built a protective "Brood Chamber", in which to raise her young! Instead of being food for HER Young, she'll now be food for a single Ammophilinae larva, feeding it until it pupates into an adult Wasp, herself!
I felt sorry for the spider but if what you're saying is true, I would rather the wasp carry away the spider than the corner of my window turning into the spawning site of hundreds of baby spiders.
What a crappy fate for the spider... that wasp will now lay eggs on it and the larva will consume the spider. These damn wasps make a nest above my front door every year, and each year I smash it to hell, only to see a bunch of paralyzed spiders fall out.
Please continue to smash them to hell and then spray the wasps with poison acetone and then glue them to each other to suffer and die attached by the wings
Very interesting footage. I recently learned about both of these species of insects. The black and yellow mud dauber wasp hunts spiders, in this case, the marbled orb weaver. It stings to paralyze, and then brings the prey back to its nest. The paralyzed spiders are then crammed into a chamber where the mud dauber wasp lays an egg and seals up the nest and leaves. I hate spiders and wasps. I recently found a pipe organ mud dauber nest on my patio, which is how I learned about them. But then when I found out that these wasps are very docile, and that they hunt these marbled orb weavers, I decided not to remove the nest. I have seen many marbled orb weavers and pipe organ mud dauber nests in my apartment complex. I even saw a wasp fighting a common house spider while in mid flight. I now know it was probably a dauber wasp.
Huh, interesting. I absolutely despise wasps but spiders are fine with me. I had a terrible experience with wasps 2 summers ago. They had a made a nest under one of my back porch steps, and I happened to be walking up those steps. All of a sudden, I was attacked by about 25-30 wasps at once and ended up getting stung about 20 times. I had never been stung before and didn't know if I was allergic, so I had to be rushed to the emergency room. The pain was terrible beyond anything that I could imagine. Ice didn't seem to do anything, but the doctor told me to keep ice on my entire body since I was stung everywhere. I had to stay in bed for at least 4 days before I could move comfortably and a week before I could exercise again. Wasps can be a bitch sometimes :(
@@caitlinwilder5982 funnily enough, they do grow up on a diet of spider hearts (well, they eat the other parts first, hearts are more like dessert) provided to them by mom. This terrifying mother hauled off that spider to such a fate.
Spiders really are great pest control. I've got a bunch of cellar spiders in the basement and attic and It's amazing how many other bugs they catch. Flies, mosquitos, stink bugs...
I’ve never seen a spider so defensive. If you’ve ever watched Monster Bug Wars you’d know that the spider, in almost every scenario, almost always wins. Wow lol.
The orb weaver spider packs a punch too. Doesnt really hurt us, but other insects die quickly from its bite. I guess it is too afraid of its nemesis to even try
Obviously that wasp lives nearby so I don't know why u wouldn't kill it. It's going to use the spider to feed it's larva, which will turn into MORE WASP. So now you'll have even more wasp.
@@jeffholmes1478 Doesn't matter. To most people, the only good wasp is a dead wasp, even though there are so many different kinds, each with their own mannerisms. Especially if they witness one killing an innocent spider... which is also abhorred by most of humanity in roughly the same matter... humans are confusing things.
@@jeffholmes1478 Indeed, but what I'm trying to say is that the morality of most of the people in this comment section is just odd (well more biased really). Too odd to observe the event respectfully and just acknowledge that nature is doing its thing. Just "oh it's a wasp, better turn on my hate vision and ignore that it's keeping the spider population in check". Many people care little about how harmless they can be, they just hate them for what they are.
It's a mud dauber wasp. It's gathering spiders, but not for themselves. They hunt spiders to paralyze, stuff them into their tube shaped mud nests (usually made around window frames or building eaves), lay eggs on them, then seal them up. The baby mud daubers then use them as a food source when they hatch out.
Anyone ever stared at the wasp’s string-thing abdomen and think, “I wonder how satisfying it’s gonna feel if I snip it in half with a pair of scissors?”
That's a mud dauber wasp. Considered non-aggressive towards humans. (like bees) They capture and paralyze spiders to take back to their young Good things to have around to keep spiders in check.
That's a mud dauber. Good to have because they eat spiders including the poisonous ones, like the Black Widow and brown recluse. Very docile towards humans. You can literally destroy its nest and it will do nothing.
I seriously doubt this lol i genuinely dont trust this information and would never destroy their homes and not expect relatitory actions. And if they are docile to humans but agressive as fuck to spiders then i have no respect for them because they are pussies of the wasp world... wasp code states that anyone can get stung
Kinda sad man. That little guy was just minding his bus. And that wasp bullied him/her. I know it's nature and all but if the spider was keeping bugs out I would've shooed the wasp away