Gardening

Have you seen a Spider Wasp catching a Wolf Spider?

The spider wasp is a family of spider-hunting parasitoid insects, so-named because the young larvae live on and exploit spiders for food.

They prey on spiders to feed their larvae or they parasitize other spider wasps.
Unlike true parasites, however, they always end up killing the host in a particularly grizzly manner. Most species of spider wasps are completely solitary (with the exception of a few group-nesting species).

While their sting is incredibly painful, the spider wasp does not usually attack people unless out of self-defense, because they don’t have a colony to defend in the manner of bees or other wasps. As a result, they are rarely anything more than a small nuisance to people.

5 Incredible Facts about Spider Wasp!

  •  The spider wasp has four distinct life stages: the egg, the larva, the pupa, and the adult.
  • They generally spend the early parts of their lives protected from the frigid winter in underground burrows. As they enter the pupa stage, the spider wasp is suspended inside of a silk cocoon to complete its transformation. In the spring, they emerge as adults and produce only a single generation per year.
  • Some species have scales that enable them to walk on spider webs and ambush their prey.
  • Spider wasps have spines on their front legs to burrow through the ground.
  • Male wasps maintain their own territory. They perch somewhere high above the ground and wait for receptive females to fly nearby while fending off any reproductive rivals. The males seem to have no actual role in hunting spiders, and therefore many lack stingers.
  • Scientists have found spider wasp fossils dating back to the Eocene between 34 and 50 million years ago. There’s some speculation that they represent early ancestral forms of wasps on account of their very basic social organization
  • They are more closely related to velvet ants and club-horned wasps than yellow jackets and hornets.

Geek Specs — Species, Types, and Scientific Name

The scientific name of the spider wasp is Pompilidae. There are some 5,000 species within the pompilid family, including more than 300 species in temperate North America alone.

Notable types include the rain spider wasp of South Africa, the black-banded spider wasp in the UK, the orange spider wasp of Sydney and Australia, and the tarantula hawks, distributed worldwide.

The scientific name pompilid is apparently derived from a Greek word meaning to send off or escort.

Appearance: How to Identify Spider Wasps

The wasp is characterized by a slender body, normally black or blue in color, with cloudy or yellow wings and long, spiny legs. Some have yellow bands or orange or red markings to warn away potential predators.

The average species in the pompilid family measures between half an inch and a full inch long. The largest members of the family, such as the tarantula hawks, are 2 inches long; they are also the largest wasps in the world.

They can be difficult to distinguish from other types of wasps, but the periodic flicking of their wings may aid in identification.

Diet: What Do Spider Wasps Eat?

The Spider wasps are omnivorous spider-hunting insects; it feeds upon animals as a larva and then switch to nectar as an adult.

Utilizing a very powerful neurotoxin, the wasp stings its prey to immobilize or kill it. The stinging strategy varies quite a bit by species.

Some spider wasps go for a quick kill shot anywhere on the body, though most try to take the spider alive.

Despite the rather suggestive name, the adult spider wasps are not carnivorous at all. In fact, they are actually nectar-feeding insects. They rely exclusively on flowers for their sustenance.
Only the larvae are able to feed on spiders. The adult wasp will only seek out and kill certain types of spiders for their larvae, depending on what’s available in the area.

It’s all about the Next-Gen

The prey needs to be large enough to sustain the larva (Next-Gen) until adulthood.
Some of their victims include the large huntsman spider, the wolf spider and tarantulas.

Some species have even evolved the ability to steal spiders from each other, thus minimizing the amount of work they need to do.
If the spider is brought back alive, then the larva will usually eat in a strategic manner to keep the prey fresh and alive for as long as possible. That means saving the internal organs for last.

Have you Seen Ridley Scott’s “Alien” Movie?

The genus of Cryptocheilus will target its prey with precision first between the fangs and then near the abdomen. Once it’s been successfully stung, the female wasp will fly or drag the prey back to the nest (sometimes even clipping the legs first), where she deposits a single egg or multiple eggs on the body.

The newly hatched larvae then consume the prey, even if it’s still alive. This type of behavior was an inspiration for Ridley Scott’s “Alien” movie.

What are they afraid of?

Depending on where the spider wasp lives, they are preyed upon by numerous mammals, birds, reptiles, and amphibians.

However, the stinger offers a natural defense against potential predators. Many species also have a very bad taste to convince a predator that it’s not worth eating.

Other harmless insects will actually mimic the appearance of the spider wasp in the hopes that it will fool their predators.

Thanks for reading.

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