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  2. 2025 Arkansas Razorbacks baseball team - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2025_Arkansas_Razorbacks...

    The 2025 Arkansas Razorbacks baseball team represents the University of Arkansas in the 2025 NCAA Division I baseball season. The Razorbacks play their home games at Baum–Walker Stadium in Fayetteville, Arkansas.

  3. Polistes fuscatus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polistes_fuscatus

    Polistes fuscatus, whose common name is the dark or northern paper wasp, is widely found in eastern North America, from southern Canada through the southern United States. [2] It often nests around human development.

  4. 2024 Arkansas Razorbacks baseball team - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2024_Arkansas_Razorbacks...

    Arkansas spent most of the year in the top 10. They were co-champions of the Southeastern Conference, [ 2 ] and hosted the Fayetteville Regional at Baum-Walker Stadium but were eliminated by TCU and ended the season in a regional for the first time since 2017.

  5. Arkansas baseball releases 2024 schedule, including some ...

    www.aol.com/entertainment/arkansas-baseball...

    Arkansas baseball released its 2024 schedule Wednesday, including some very intriguing non-conference matchups to compliment the always difficult SEC slate.

  6. Polistes carolina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polistes_carolina

    Typically, paper wasps are relatively unaggressive, only attacking humans and animals if they or their nests are being threatened. As in other aculeate wasps, only females have the ability to sting. [16] Unlike bees, wasps do not have barbed stingers that can be lost, so they are able to sting multiple times to defend a nest. [17]

  7. Why Arkansas baseball will — and won't — beat UNC ... - AOL

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  8. Polistes apachus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polistes_apachus

    Polistes apachus is a social wasp native to western North America. [2] It is known in English by the common name Texas paper wasp, [3] [4] or southwestern Texas paper wasp. [5] It has also been called the Apache wasp, perhaps first by Simmons et al. in California in 1948.

  9. Synoeca septentrionalis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synoeca_septentrionalis

    Synoeca septentrionalis is one of five species of wasps in the genus Synoeca. [1] It is a swarm-founding wasp that is also eusocial, [2] exhibiting complicated nest structure and defense mechanisms [3] and a colony cycle including a pre-emergence phase and a post-emergence phase. [4]