While these images may not be all that appetizing, there's no reason to swear off figs quite yet. Those little insects are fig wasps, and they play an essential role in the fig's life cycle as the plant's only pollinator. That means that for pollen from one fig plant to reach another plant, fig wasps must do all the leg work. In return, the plant provides fig wasps with their only sources of food and shelter.
This arrangement is called mutualism. Both plant and wasp depend on the arrangement to survive, and without one, you wouldn't have the other.
But what happens when it's time to harvest the figs? Are the wasps still inside? Do the food companies scrape them out before they turn figs into jam? Or were the 12-year-olds right all along -- are we really eating a mouthful of sweet baby wasp paste?
How Stuff Works lays out the entire story. Link -via Holy Kaw!
(Image credit: Flickr user Xerones)
Mmmm... proteins...
"The passage is so cramped that the tiny fig wasp loses her wings and antenna during her claustrophobic trek"
I feel conflicted over my sudden desire for fig newtons.