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| HYMENOPTERA, Sphecoidea --  <Images> & <Juveniles>   Members of this superfamily largely provision their nests with
  other insects.  Generally the group
  may be regarded as beneficial, the number of pest species that serve as prey
  far exceeding that of the entomophagous species.  Habits of the group are much more simplified when compared to
  the Vespoidea and Apoidea, and there is little development of a complex
  social life as in the latter.  The
  nests comprise either one cell or a group, and are located in diverse
  places.  Most species burrow in the
  soil; but some build nests of mud, clay or sand, while others nest in stems
  of plants or in a variety of cavities of suitable size (Clausen 1940/1962).   Host preferences range wide, including almost all the more common
  insect orders, though the most common groups serving as prey are Hemiptera,
  Orthoptera, Hymenoptera, Homoptera, Diptera, Lepidoptera and spiders.  In many species, especially those
  attacking large hosts, only a single prey is placed in each cell, while
  others may require a considerable number to bring each larva to
  maturity.  The prey may be temporarily
  or permanently paralyzed, or it may be killed.   Clausen (1940) noted a number of researchers who had worked on
  the superfamily.  Presently only the
  family Sphecidae is considered with 
  13 subfamilies as follows: 
  Ampulicinae, Bembicinae, Cercerinae, Crabroninae, Larrinae,
  Mellininae, Nyssoninae, Pemphredoninae, Philanthinae, Pseninae, Sphecinae,
  Stizinae and Trypoxyloninae (see Taxnames
  for respective file names).      References:   Please refer to  <biology.ref.htm>, [Additional references
  may be found at:  MELVYL
  Library]   Insects
  of Australia.  1991. CSIRO, Division
  of Entomology, Melbourne University Press, 2nd Edition, pp 989.    Insects
  of Australia and New Zealand. 
  1926.  R. J. Tillyard, Angus
  & Robertson, Ltd, Sydney, p297.    What wasp
  is that?  2007.  An interactive identification guide to the
  Australasian families of Hymenoptera   |