File:  <familyhy.htm>                                : 
< (Entomology),        (Invertebrates), (General Index)>      <Invertebrate
Bibliography>       <Glossary>      <Site Description>   < Home>
 
 
 
|   Entomology:  HYMENOPTERA
  1 Kingdom:  Animalia, Phylum: Arthropoda Subphylum: Hexapoda: Class: Insecta: Order: Hymenoptera Selected Superfamilies,
  Families & Subfamilies of Hymenoptera (Contact)             Please CLICK on
  Superfamily for Families and on included Illustrations to enlarge                  Depress
  Ctrl/F to search for subject matter                 There are two suborders:  Symphyta (Chalastogastra)
  are the sawflies and Apocrita (Clistogastra)
  are all other groups.               The Symphyta have eruciform
  larvae and their prolegs are without crochets may occur on all abdominal
  segments.  The adults have the abdomen
  broadly joined with the thorax.  The
  ovipositor is adapted for piercing so that their eggs may be laid in hard
  wood.  There are many pestiferous
  species in this group.             The Apocrita contains the
  largest number of species of Hymenoptera. 
  Their larvae are grub like without legs.  Some develop as grubs on other animals and their mother
  nourishes some.  The adults have a
  distinct petiole, and in some ant species both the second and third abdominal
  segments may form the petiole.  A node
  is usually present.   =
  = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =             The following discussion includes
  only the most common or important families or subfamilies of Hymenoptera. The
  classification continues to fluctuate in this order, and therefore, older
  names are included in parentheses for clarity as much of the world literature
  deployed them.  Additional information
  on <Habits>,
  <Adults>
  and <Juveniles>
  is included when available.  For
  greater detail please refer to Borror et al. (1989) and
  <taxnames>,
  and for an expanded treatment of Hymenoptera taxonomy with 92 families noted
  please see <92
  Families>.                   SYMPHYTA:  Most Symphyta are
  phytophagous external feeders on foliage. The larvae of the external feeders
  are eruciform and differ from those of the Lepidoptera by having more than
  five pairs of prolegs that lack crochets and usually have only one pair of
  ocelli. The larvae of a few species bore in stems, fruits, wood, or leaves
  (leaf miners); these larvae usually have the prolegs reduced or absent. All
  the Symphyta have a prominent ovipositor, which is used in inserting the eggs
  into the tissues of the host plant. In the Tenthredinoidea the ovipositor is
  somewhat saw like, hence the common name "sawflies" for the members
  of this group.  Most of the Symphyta have a single generation a
  year and overwinter as a full-grown larva or as a pupa, either in a cocoon or
  in some sort of protected place. Most of the external feeders overwinter in a
  cocoon or cell in the soil, while boring species usually do so in their
  tunnels in the host plant. Some of the larger species spend more than a year
  to complete their development (Borror et al. 1989).          Superfamily:  Cephoidea             Cephidae.-- The Stem
  Sawflies are slim, laterally
  compressed sawflies.  The larvae bore
  in the stems of grasses and berries. Cephus cinctus Norton bores in the stems of
  wheat and is known as the wheat stem sawfly.  Adults average 8-10 mm in length, and are
  shining black, banded and spotted with yellow. C. cinctus is a pest of
  wheat in the western North America, while C. pygmaeus (L.), is
  problematic in eastern parts of the continent.  Janus
  integer (Norton) bores in the stems of currants; the adult is
  shining black and about 12 mm long. 
  There is one generation a year, and overwintering occurs in a silken
  cocoon inside the plant where the larva feeds.     --------------------------------          Superfamily:  Megalodontoidea             Pamphiliidae. -- Web-Spinning and
  Leaf-Rolling Sawflies are
  thick-bodied and I usually less than 13 mm long. Some have gregarious larvae
  while others feed singly.  The
  gregarious species live in silk nests made by tying several leaves together,
  and the solitary ones live in a shelter formed from a leaf. The group is
  uncommon, and only a few of them are of much economic importance. Some
  species are pests of conifers, Neurotoma inconspicua (Norton) (a web
  spinning species) attacks plums, and Pamphilius persicum MacGillivray
  (a leaf-rolling species) damages peaches.     --------------------------------          Superfamily:  Orussoidea --              Orussidae. -- <Overview>; <Adults> & <Juveniles> -- Parasitic
  Wood Wasps
  are a small group of rare
  insects.  The adults resemble
  horntails but are much smaller (8-13 mm long). The larvae are parasitic on
  the larvae of metallic wood-boring beetles (Buprestidae).     --------------------------------          Superfamily:  Siricoidea             Siricidae. -- Horntails are
  large insects, ca. 26 mm. or more long, and their larvae bore into wood.  Both males and females have a spearlike
  plate on the last abdominal segment. 
  They attack primarily coniferous trees, but hardwoods are also
  selected.  Their larvae do not cause
  as much damage to trees as do other species in Symphyta.             Most attack conifers, but those in
  eastern North America also attack maple, elm, beech, and other hardwoods. The
  larvae are not usually numerous enought to much damage. Pupation occurs in
  burrows constructed by the larvae .      --------------------------------          Superfamily:  Tenthredinoidea             Argidae. -- The argid sawflies are a small
  group with 78 North American species known. 
  They are  medium-sized to
  small, robust sawflies, that are distinguished by the characteristic
  antennae.  The males of a few species
  have the last antennal segment U-shaped or Y -shaped. Most species are black
  or dark in color. The larvae feed on various 
  trees, but Arge humeralis (Beauvois) feeds on poison ivy, Sphacophilus
  celluldris (Say) feeds on sweet potato, and Schizocerella pilicornis (Holmgren)
  mines leaves of Portulaca (Borror & DeLong, 1954).     --------------------------------             Blasticotomidae. -- There is one species, Blasticotoma
  filiceti, in Europe.  The larva
  inhabits a cavity in the petiole of plant leaves, where it relies on the sap
  that leaks from surrounding tissue. 
  In Belgium B. filiceti feeds on ferns with and produces a
  conspicuous foam at the larval stage.      --------------------------------             Cimbicidae. --
  Cimbicid sawflies are large, heavy sawflies
  with clubbed antennae. They resemble bumblebees. The most abundant species is
  the elm
  sawfly, Cimbex americana Leach, a
  dark colored insect 16-26 mm long. 
  Females have four small yellow spots on each side of the abdomen. The
  full-grown larva is about 42 mm long, and a black stripe down the back. When
  at rest or when disturbed, it forms a spiral posture, but when disturbed, it
  may eject a fluid, from glands located 
  above the spiracles. This species has one generation a year and
  overwinters as a full-grown larva in a cocoon in the ground; it pupates in
  the spring, and adults appear in summer. The larva attacks elm and willow
  primarily.     --------------------------------             Pergidae. -- Pergid sawflies are a small group with only 15
  North American species identified. 
  They  occur from the eastern
  states west to Arizona, but are uncommon. 
  The larvae feed on the foliage of oak and hickory. American  species belong to the genus Acordulecera.     --------------------------------             Tenthredinidae. -- <Overview>;
  <Adults>  The
  common sawflies
  or horntails
  are broad-waisted insects that lay their eggs in wood.  It is a large group of wasp like species
  that are frequently vibrantly colored. 
  They are encountered around flowers and other plant foliage.  Their size usually does not exceed 21 mm
  long.               The eruciform larvae feed
  externally on foliage but some bore into hardwood.  They will leave their burrows to feed on tree foliage.  Most have one generation per year and they
  overinter in a cocoon or pupal cell that is located in some protective area
  or in the ground.             Some sawflies are very
  destructive. The larch sawfly, Pristiphora
  erichsonii (Hartig), is a pest of larch and, when abundant
  they can cause extensive defoliation. The imported
  currantworm, Nematus ribesii (Scopoli) ,
  is a serious pest of currants and Gooseberries (Borror
  & DeLong, 1954).             Several species construct galls, and a few are leaf miners.
  The elm leafminer, Fenusa ulmi Sundeval,
  mines  the leaves of elm trees.               The Cherry slug feeds on leaves
  leaving only a network of veins. 
  Their distribution is widespread in North America.  There are two generations per year, but
  the second generation does the most damage. 
  These insects are very susceptible to most insecticides.   --------------------------------              Diprionidae. -- The Conifer
  sawflies larvae attack conifers but
  only a few of them are of economic importance. Some are  web spinners that feed on plum trees or
  leaf rollers that feed on peach trees. 
  The females have pectinate and males have bipectinate antennae.     --------------------------------              Xiphydriidae. -- The Xiphydriidae are a family of wood wasps
  with 28 genera and 14 species and some fossil taxa.   They have globose heads borne on long, thin "necks";
  they are unusual in the habit of boring into dead wood, rather than living
  trees.  The family is small and
  ancient, with about 140 living species in several genera.  They are primarily confined to the
  Northern Hemisphere and only a few are Neotropical species.   Taeger, A.;
  Liston, A.D.; Prous, M.; Groll, E.K.; et al. (2018). "ECatSym –
  Electronic World Catalog of Symphyta (Insecta, Hymenoptera)".
  Senckenberg Deutsches Entomologisches Institut (SDEI), Müncheberg. Retrieved
  2019-06-01.    Jennings, J.T.,
  Austin, A.D. and Bashford, R. (2009). First record of the woodwasp family
  Xiphydriidae from Tasmania with a description of a new species and host
  record. Australian Journal of Entomology 48: 25-28.     --------------------------------          Superfamily:  Xyeloidea             Xyelidae. -- The small
  sawflies are
  less than 11 mm. long.  They differ from
  other sawflies in having three marginal wing cells and the third antennal
  segment being very long. The larvae feed on the wood and pinecones of various
  trees, but the damage that they cause is slight compared to other members of
  the Symphyta.                There are not many species and
  none are of much economic importance.   --------------------------------        APOCRITA:
  -- The Apocrita differ from the Symphyta in having
  a constricted base of their abdomen. 
  The thorax appears as for segments with the propodeum being the first
  abdominal segment fused with the thoracic segments.  The hind wings do not have more than two basal cells. The
  larvae are usually grub like or maggot like and vary in feeding habits; some
  are parasitic or predatory on other insects, while others are phytophagous.
  The adults feed primarily on flowers, sap, and other plant materials; some of
  the parasitic species occasionally feed on the body fluids of the host in a
  behavior  Known
  as "host feeding."             Many species in this are
  parasitoids in the larval stage on other insects (or other invertebrates)
  and, because of their abundance, are very important in the natural balance of
  insect populations. Most of the parasitic Apocrita lay their eggs on or in
  the body of the host, and many have a long ovipositor with which hosts in
  cocoons, burrows, or other protected situations may be reached. In some cases
  only a single egg is laid on a host; in others, several to many eggs may be
  laid on the same host. A single parasitoid attacking a host usually pupates
  inside the host; where there are many parasitoids in the same host, they may
  pupate inside it, on the outside of it, or entirely away from it. Some
  species are parthenogenetic. Polyembryony is found in a few species. Some of
  the parasitic species are hyperparasitoids (Borror et al. 1989).           Aculeata =
  Stinging
  Hymenoptera          Superfamily:  Apoidea. -- <Overview> [Incl. old Sphecoidea]             Andrenidae. -- <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles> -- The mason
  bees are small to medium-sized
  bees that are distinguished by two subantennal sutures below each antennal
  socket.  There are about 1300 species
  known to exist in North America They nest in burrows in the ground, and their
  burrows are similar to those of the halictids; sometimes large numbers of
  these bees will nest close together in areas where there is little
  vegetation.     --------------------------------             Apidae:  Apinae:
  -- <Habits>; <Adults>
  & <Juveniles> -- The honeybees always produce a
  wax comb with hexagonal cells. The cells serve for larval rearing sites and
  honey storage.  Honey is formed in the
  stomach from nectar through the action of enzymes.  It is regurgitated into the storage cells.               The developing brood is fed with
  pollen.  The queen is responsible for
  the production of eggs.  She produces
  a "queen substance" that suppresses
  the development of other females in the colony.             A marked division of labor occurs
  in the colony.  The drones exist
  solely for the purpose of mating with the queen.  There is a continuous cycle in a colony, and a division takes
  place when a second queen is produced. 
  The old queen then leads a part of the old colony away to a new site
  in a swarm.  Three principal stimuli to the production
  of new queens are, (1) when an overabundance of individuals occurs in the
  hive, (2) an old queen dies and (3) when there is a shortage of food.  The latter case stimulates swarming to
  form new colonies.             Apiculture regularly includes
  artificial insemination.  The genetic
  configuration of a queen is 2X, a worker 2X and a drone 1X.  Drones are produced from unfertilized
  eggs.             Honeybees are of great economic
  importance in that they are widely deployed for the pollination of both
  orchard and field crops (Please see Insect
  Pollination).  Bee venom has been used in therapy and royal
  jelly
  has been touted for rather
  doubtful rejuvenation properties.   --------------------------------                  Anthophorini (previously
  under Anthophoridae). -- <Habits>;  <Adults>   Digger bees
  are
  robust and hairy and collect pollen from various plants.  They nest in the ground and line their
  cells with a waxy material.  Some
  species are parasitic on other bees.     --------------------------------                  Bombini
  (Bombidae).-- Bumblebees, of Western Hemispheric
  origin, are easily recognized by their large robust shape and yellow and
  black stripes.  Some species also
  display orange coloration.  They are
  important and efficient pollinators of clover and alfalfa.  They have been introduced successfully
  into Europe.                Their nests occur in the ground, and in colder climates
  only the queen survives the winter. 
  In springtime the queen chooses a nesting site and produces a brood of
  all workers, which assume all the chores of a colony except egg laying.  They slowly enlarge the nest, collect and
  store food, create honey pots,
  and tend the young larvae.  Males and
  more queens are produced in summer and in autumn all but the queens will
  perish.             Some genera of bumblebees are parasites of other
  bumblebees and they rely on other species to manage colonies --------------------------------                  Xylocopinae (previously under Anthophoridae).
  --  (= Nomadidae) <Habits>;  <Adults>  Carpenter bees do
  not have a protuberant clypeus, the front coxae are transverse, and the last
  abdominal tergite lacks a triangular platelike area.                 They construct nests in plant stems and wood.  They resemble bumblebees in size and the
  noise they make while in flight. 
  Damage is considerable to the exterior portion of wooden structures as
  a result of their affixing nests there.   --------------------------------                  Nomadinae (previously under Anthophoridae).-- <Habits>;  <Adults>
  -- & <Habits>;
  <Adults>
  & <Juveniles>
  -- These are the cuckoo bees,
  which are parasites in the nests of other bees.  They resemble wasps in that their bodies are relatively free of
  hairs.     --------------------------------             Colletidae. -- <Habits>; <Adults>   The
  Plasterer
  bees
  and Yellow-faced
  bees
  are a primitive group with
  short tongues that are either bilobed at the tip or truncate.     --------------------------------             Ctenoplectridae.
  -- Habits;  Adults  
  Juveniles   There were 21 species known as of 2020 of these bulky, medium-sized to
  small bees.  They exist in Africa and
  tropical and eastern Asia, south to northern Australia.  Nests are in wood burrows or in old mud
  nests of wasps.             The mentum and
  lorum is similar to that of the Melittidae (Finnamore & Michener
  1993).  Michener & Greenberg
  (1980) reviewed the family associations.   --------------------------------             Fideliidae.
  --  Habits;  Adults   Juveniles  Fideliidae are
  long-tongued bees with a labrum that is longer than broad.  The mandibles contain many teeth and anre
  not wide and the forewings have three submarginal cells.  These bees do not carry pollen on their
  hind legs (Finnamore & Michener 1993).  
  The family had about 18 species identified by 2011, and it is
  sometimes placed in the Megachilidae. 
  They nest in soil burrows and do not supply them with debris.   Three genera occur only southern Africa,
  Morocco, and central Chile (Finnamore & Michener 1993).     --------------------------------             Halictidae. -- <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles>
  -- The sweat bees
  are
  small to moderately sized bees that have a metallic sheen.  Their harched basal wing vein
  distinguishes them.  Most nest in
  ground burrows, either on level ground or in river banks.  Their principal tunnel is often vertical
  with lateral tunnels that branch out to end in a single cell.     --------------------------------             Hylaeidae. --  Habits; 
  Adults  
  Juveniles    Clausen (1940) considered this family under the Apoidea, noting
  that they were a small family of primitive bees that make their nests in
  stems of plants, in burrows in the soil, or in various holes and
  crevices.  Several members of the
  principal genus Hylaeus (Prosopis) have been observed in Hawaii
  by Perkins and are stated to live at the expense of other bees of the family,
  although the exact relationships were not known. --------------------------------             Megachilidae. --
  <Habits>; <Adults>   Leafcutting
  bees
  are moderately sized
  insects that are distinguished from most other bees in having two submarginal
  cells of about equal length.  They
  line their nests with pieces of plant leaves that they often cut in circular
  fashion.  Some species are
  parasitic.  Their nests occur in the
  ground or some suitable cavity and in wood. 
  Some species are valued in the pollination of alfalfa.               The common name originates from
  the habit of many lining their nests with pieces cut from leaves. These
  pieces are usually very carefully cut out, and it is not unusual to find
  plants from which circular pieces have been cut. A few species are parasitic.
  The nests are constructed in the ground but more often in some natural
  cavity, and often in wood.   --------------------------------             Melittidae. -- <Habits>; <Adults>   Melittids
  are small, dark bees that are not very often encountered as they are
  relatively rare.  They have similar
  nesting habits to the Andrenidae. They are distinguished by having the jugal
  lobe of the hind wing shorter than the submedian cell, and the segments of
  the labial palps are similar and cylindrical. North American species nest in
  burrows in the soil.     --------------------------------             Oxaeidae. --  Habits;  Adults   Juveniles   Oxaeidae are large bees that have a short glossa and the
  preepisternal groove below the scrobal depression is missing.  The ocelli are positioned low on the face.  There are basitibial and pygidial plates
  present. (Finnamore & Michener 1993). This is often placed as the American subfamily Oxaeinae of the bee family Andrenidae, with large
  13-26 mm, rapid-flying bees, frequently with large eyes. There are four
  identified genera, with a total of 21 described species by 2011.  They range from North America to
  Argentina. The name Oxaeidae is frequently used, and treated as a family, but
  they were changed to subfamily status by some specialists in 1995.  A key reference is Hurd & Linsley (1976).     --------------------------------             Sphecidae. -- <Habits>; Subfamilies of Sphecidae  <Adults> & <Juveniles>
  -- The mud daubers
  have a very long
  petiole.  Most are moderate-sized to
  large, with a complete wing venation, but a few are small with a length of
  only 2 mm. The small sphecids have a reduced wing venation, with 4-5 closed
  cells in the front wing. There are
  over 1200 species of these solitary wasps in North America.  There is the start of social
  organization shown in some groups.               Females construct their nests
  attached to some object.  Most species
  nest in burrows in the ground, but some nest in natural cavities such as
  hollow plant stems, cavities in wood, etc. 
  Some also construct nests of mud. They paralyze spiders, lay an egg
  and seal the cell.  The larvae
  develop, pupate and chew their way out.             There
  is a restriction to a particular type of food for the larvae of some species,
  but a few vary considerably in their selection of prey. Some are also
  cleptoparasitic, building no nest but laying their eggs in the nests of other
  wasps, their larvae feeding on the food stored for the host larvae.   --------------------------------             Stelidae. --  Habits; 
  Adults  
  Juveniles    Clausen (1940)
  discussed bees in the Stelidae are inquilines in the cells of other bees,
  principally Megachilidae.  Clausen
  (1940) noted that attack on the early stages of the host in the cell is
  mainly for the purpose of eliminating a rival for the food supply.  In Europe, Stelis nasuta Latr.
  attacks the cells of Chalicodoma muraria F. (Fabre 1886).  Such cells are made of a hard,
  plaster-like substance, ca. 1 cm. thick, which the female must penetrate
  before oviposition is possible.  The
  lid is removed with her mandibles, and several eggs are laid next to the
  host.  After ovipositing, the cell is
  sealed by the stelid.  The young
  larvae of the host and stelid feed in the same area without interference; but
  the Stelis larva develops more
  rapidly and the host does not attain sufficient food to complete
  development.  In S. minuta Nyl., the
  female lays the egg on the food material in the open cell of Osmia leucomeleana Kirby before the latter lays her egg (Verhoeff
  1892).  The Stelis egg hatches first, and for some time the two larvae feed
  independently on the beebread, the parasitoid at the bottom and the host at
  the top.  Development of the former is
  quicker and eventually the latter consumes the host larva.   --------------------------------              Stenotritidae. --  Habits; 
  Adults  
  Juveniles  The Stenotritidae is the smallest of all
  formally recognised bee families, with only 21 species in two genera
  known.  All of them have been found
  only in Australia.     --------------------------------   --------------------------------        Superfamily:  Chrysidoidea --  (Incl. old  Bethyloidea) <Overview>             Bethylidae. -- <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles>
  -- Bethylids are small to medium-sized,
  dark-colored wasps; the females of many species are apterous and antlike in
  appearance. In some there are both winged and wingless forms.  They are parasitoids of the larvae of
  Lepidoptera and Coleoptera and several species attack moths or beetles that
  infest grain or flour. A few species will sting humans.  Goniozus
  legneri Gordh has been deployed successfully in the biological
  control of navel orangeworm, Amyelois transitella (Walker)  (See ch-77.htm).     --------------------------------             Chrysididae.-- <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles>
  -- Cuckoo
  wasps
  are small insects, rarely over 11 mm long.  Their color is metallic green or blue, and
  usually the body is  coarsely
  sculptured. They resemble some of the 
  chalcids and bees in size and coloration, but a more complete venation
  in the front wing but no closed cells in the hind wing distinguish the cuckoo
  wasps.  Also the structure of the
  abdomen is distinctive and has only 3-4 visible segments and is hollowed
  ventrally. When a cuckoo wasp is disturbed, it usually curls up in a ball.
  Most species are external parasitoids of full-grown wasp or bee larvae; the
  species in the genus Cleptes attack sawfly larvae, and those in Mesitiopterus
  attack the eggs of walking sticks (Borror et al., 1989).     --------------------------------             Cleptidae.
  --  <Habits>; <Adults>
  & <Juveniles>   In 1940 Cleptidae was represented by
  the genus Cleptes, in Europe, North
  America and Asia (Clausen 1940/62). 
  Indeed, in general appearance and behavior, and undescribed species of
  Cleptes from Korea, bore a close
  resemblance to parasitic Chrysididae. 
  Clausen (1940) noted that several other species were reared from
  sawfly cocoons in various parts of the world.       Adult female Cleptes
  sp. is very active, spending most of her time on the ground in search of
  sawfly cocoons.  When one is found,
  she gnaws a hole in the cocoon wall, and the extensible ovipositor is
  inserted by a backward thrust.  The
  3-jointed ovipositor is longer than the abdomen when extended.  The egg is placed horizontally on the host
  body in the mid-ventral curve of the abdomen but does not adhere.  When oviposition is complete, the female
  smears a quantity of mucilaginous material over the hole in the cocoon wall,
  thereby sealing it.  This spot of hard
  glistening material can recognize parasitized cocoons.  The oviposition behavior is almost
  identical to that of Chrysis
  shanghaiensis Smith, which
  attacks cocoons of Lepidoptera (Clausen 1940/62).   --------------------------------             Dryinidae. -- <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles> -- These
  are rare wasps, and in most species males and females are morphologically
  distinct. Some females are wingless and resemble ants. The antennae have ten
  segments, and the front tarsi of the female are usually pincerlike. The
  peculiar -front tarsi of some females in this family are deployed for holding the host during
  oviposition.  Most dryinids are
  parasitoids of nymphs and adults of Homoptera.  Their larvae feed internally on the host, although during most
  of their development a part of the body of the larva protrudes from the host
  in a saclike structure. The parasitoid, when full grown, leaves the host and
  spins a silken cocoon nearby. Polyembryony occurs in some species.     --------------------------------             Embolemidae. -- <Habits>; <Adults>   The biology of this group is not well studied.   A Nearctic species was reared from
  homopteran nymphs (Achilidae) feeding on subcortical fungi. Females have been
  collected in ant nests and small mammal burrows.  There are ca.. 22 species in 2 or 3 genera.               Adults very tiny to small, solitary wasps.  Antennal segments
  are 10 in males and 13 in females. The geniculate antennae are inserted above
  the lower margins of the eye.  The
  pronotum is short and does not extemd back to the tegulae. Cenchri are
  absent, but wings may be either present or absent.  The fore-wings have a prominent pterostigma; with the venation
  well developed but reduced apically. 
  Forewing cells 6–10 are closed. 
  The hind wings do not have closed cells.  Fore femora are either dilated or not. Hind femur do not have a
  well developed  trochantellus. The
  hind tibiae have spurs that are seemingly specialized for a cleaning.             The abdomen has a notable basal constriction.  They may be either a long petiole, or
  short-waist in females. There are 7 visible abdominal segments.  The female ovipositer is conspicuous or
  modified as a retractable stinging apparatus.             The legs of the larvae may be
  either present or vestigial.  These
  wasps are considered parasitic on unknown hosts that are selected by the
  females.    --------------------------------             Sclerogibbidae. --  <Habits>; <Adults>   These wasps are distributed worldwide in warmer climates.  There ae 14 African species in 3
  genera.  They are ectoparasitoids of
  Embioptera nymphs.  Pupations is in
  the host web.  They are solitary or gregarious ectoparasitoids of Embioptera
  (webspinners). The larvae stay attached to the metasomal intersegmental
  membranes of nymphal webspinners and pupate in the tunnels of their
  host.  Biological information is
  scarce.             Females are apterous while males are fully winged. They
  vary in length from 2.2 - 6.5 mm, and are distinguished by the antennae
  inserted just below a protruding shelf on the face; the antennae have 20 or
  more segments.  The head is triangular in lateral view and the front femur is swollen.  Females have an hourglass-shaped mesosoma,
  while the fore wing of males lacks a pterostigma and distal venation.  The hind wing has no closed cells but a
  large basal lobe.  --------------------------------       CHRYSIDOIDEA DATA BEING OBTAINED           Plumariidae 
  Habits;  Adults   Juveniles           Scolebythidae 
  Habits;  Adults   Juveniles   --------------------------------        Superfamily:  Vespoidea (Incl. old Formicoidea, Pompiloidea, Scolioidea                                                              
  & Tiphioidea)-- <Overview>             Bradynobaenidae -- <Habits>; <Adults>   There
  were about 160 species in this family known as of 2010.  Most of them occur in tropical areas.  However, the family is absent from
  Australasia.  Adults are often hairy
  and black, brown, reddish, or bicolored and sometimes marked with bands.  The integument is often thick and hard,
  and the females give a painful sting. 
  Sex associations are very difficult (Brothers & Finnamore
  1993).  All species are probably
  solitary.  Some information indicates
  that the larvae are ectoparasitic on Solifugae (Arachnida)     --------------------------------
               Eumenidae  (Eumeninae). -- <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles>. -- The powder
  wasps
  construct mud or stick
  shelters.               The diagram shows a cross-section
  of a burrow in a stem:  The partitions
  between the cells are very regular and curved.  As the partitions are being laid down, the female back out of
  the stalk. The larvae always orient themselves with their heads turned toward
  the open end of the tube, which they detect by feeling the smooth, curved end
  of the partition with their abdomen.               These wasps sting many pest
  insects to death, and can store 6-8 caterpillars in each cell.   --------------------------------             Formicidae. -- <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles>
  --The ants exist
  as many species and they are numerically very abundant.  Polymorphism is pronounced.  The various social orders in the family
  have developed around a caste system. 
  This includes a queen, workers, soldiers, etc.  The workers can appear in different shapes
  and forms as influenced by nutrition and care among individuals of the
  colony.  All of the workers are
  wingless.               The abdomen in this group is rather soft and able to take on a
  great deal of food, which other members of their colony are able to
  solicit.  They obtain it by stroking
  the bearer who then regurgitates the food.             Colony Establishment.
  -- New males and females in the colony develop wings, after which they swarm
  and mate.  The females fall to the
  ground and chew off their wings, while the males dies.  The female then finds a suitable place to
  construct a cell into which she will lay eggs.  While waiting for the eggs to hatch, the female does not
  feed.  She derives nourishment by
  absorbing internal body parts, such as wing muscles, etc.             Some species such as the driver
  and army ants are nomadic. 
  Conspicuous nests in the ground may be 2.7 meters or more below the
  surface.  Ants also may live in oak
  acorns, dry stems, etc.  Their food
  includes seeds, dead insects, aphid honeydew and household foods.  They may even take aphids into their nests
  for the winter where they are attended.             Ant control in houses is possible
  with poison bait traps.  The treatment
  of concrete foundations with insecticides is a more drastic approach.   --------------------------------            Mutillidae (velvet ants) -- <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles> -- These
  insects derive their name from the females, which are wingless and antlike
  and are covered with dense hairs. The males are winged and usually larger
  than the females and are also densely pubescent. Most species have "felt
  lines" laterally on the
  second abdominal tergum: narrow longitudinal bands of relatively dense,
  closely oppressed hairs (Borror &  DeLong,
  1954).                    The females give a painful sting.
  Some species can stridulate, and produce a squeaking sound when disturbed.
  Most of the mutillids are external parasitoids of the larvae and pupae of
  bees and wasps.  Some also attack
  beetles and flies. They are frequently found in open areas. This group is
  large  with about 480 North American
  species identified as of 2010.  Most
  species occur in arid regions of South and Western North America.   --------------------------------            Pompilidae (spider wasps) -- (= Psammocharidae) <Habits>; <Adults> &  <Juveniles> -- The
  pompilids ire thin glabrous wasps with long spiny legs, a quadrate pronotum,
  and a typical suture across the mesopleuron. 
  The more common members are 14-26 mm long, but some species are 34-42 mm in length. Most spider wasps are dark-colored, with smoky
  yellow wings; a few are brightly colored.                The adults are
  commonly found on flowers or on the ground where they search for prey. The
  larvae of most species feed on spiders, from which they derive their common
  name.   However these are not the only
  wasps that kill spiders. The spider wasps generally capture and paralyze a
  spider and then prepare a cell for it in the ground, in rotten wood, or in a
  crevice in rocks. Some spider wasps construct a cell first, and then hunt for
  a spider to store in the cell. Some also attack the spider in its own cell or
  burrow and do not move it after stinging and ovipositing on it.  A few species oviposit on spiders that
  have been stung by another wasp (Borror &
  DeLong, 1954). The spider wasps are
  fairly common insects with over 275 North American species identified as of
  2010.  Females have a very efficient
  sting.   --------------------------------            Rhopalosomatidae
  -- <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles>
  --
  There are two rare species that
  occur in the eastern North America, Rhopalosoma nearcticum Brues and Olixon
  banksii (Brues). R. nearcticum is 14.2-21 mm or more in length, is
  light brown in color, and resembles ichneumonids of the genus Ophion, but
  it does not have a compressed abdomen, the antennae contain only 12 (female)
  or 13 (male) segments, and there is only one recurrent vein in the front wing
  (Borror & DeLong,
  1954).  Ophion banksii is about 6.1 mm long
  and has reduced wings that extend only to the tip of the propodeum. The
  larvae of these wasps attack crickets.     --------------------------------            Sapygidae
  -- <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles> -- This is  are a small (19 North American species) and
  rare group. The adults are of moderate size, usually spotted and black or
  banded with yellow, and with squat legs. They are parasitoids of leaf cutting
  bees (Megachllidae) and other wasps.     --------------------------------              Scoliidae --
  <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles> -- These wasps are
  similar to males of the Muullidae. 
  They are large, hairy, and usually black with yellow bands on their
  abdomen.  The larvae are external
  parasitoids of the larvae of scarabaeid beetles.  Adults are usually collected from flowers. The females burrow
  into the ground to locate a host grub, which they sting  and paralyze.  They then burrow deeper into the soil and construct a cell
  around the grub. Many grubs may be stung without the wasp ovipositing, but
  these grubs usually do not recover.     --------------------------------              Sierolomorphidae -- <Habits>; <Adults>   These is a small (seven
  North American species) but widely distributed group of shining black wasps
  4.3-6.2 mm long. They are rare, and there have been few studies of their
  immature stages.     --------------------------------              Tiphiidae -- <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles> --:
  This is a large family, with over145 North American species, which are common
  and widely distributed. They are black, medium-sized, and slightly hairy,
  with small legs. The larvae are parasitoids of scarab beetle larvae; one
  species, Tiphia popilliavora Rohwer, was imported to North
  America for the biological control of the Japanese beetle.     --------------------------------             Vespidae. --
  <Habits>;
  <Adults> & <Juveniles>  -- The paper
  wasps, hornets and
  yellow
  jackets
  construct nests with cells
  of paper.  They are social insects
  with a queen that is the only overwintering form.  The workers are for food gathering and defense, while the males
  serve only to mate with the females.     --------------------------------             Parasitica. -- Many of the
  Parasitica have been deployed in the biological control of other insects                                       (Please see Biocontrol)          Superfamily:  Ceraphronoidea--. <Overivew>             Calliceratidae . -- 
  <Habits>;  <Adults>
  & <Juveniles>  This family is now generally placed
  with the Ceraphronidae.  However, it
  has been reported as a small family with hosts in the Diptera, Hymenoptera,
  Lepidoptera, Coleoptera and Homoptera. 
  They are more generally found as secondary external parasitoids of
  Aphididae and dactylopine Coccidae, through Braconidae and chalcidoid
  primaries.  Calliceras abnormis
  Perk. attacks mature dryinid larvae in their cocoons in Hawaii, and Lygocerus semiramosus Kieff, is a secondary parasitoid of Chermidae through
  Encyrtidae in India (Clausen 1940/1962). 
  Specimens found in amber have been assigned to this family also, an
  example of which follows:     --------------------------------             Ceraphronidae --.
  <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles> -- This is a large group whose
  members have been reared from a variety of hosts. Some ceraphronids are
  hyperparasitic, attacking the braconid or chalcid parasitoids of aphids or
  scale insects. Wingless forms in this group often inhabit soil and leaf
  litter.     --------------------------------            
  Megaspilidae
  --. <Habits>; <Adults>   The antennae in both male
  and female Megaspilidae have an equal number of segments (Alekseev 1978/1987). 
  There is a receded area above the antennal sockets.  The subcostal vein in front of the
  pterostigma is usually thickened and forms the prostigma.  Mesonotum in anterior part along sides sometimes
  with two parallel grooves extending from median groove.  Abdominal petiole masked by
  "neck" and not visible unless abdomen removed.  The abdomen is compressed
  dorsoventrally.  The male genitalia
  have volsellar plates prominently separated from parameres."  There were 10 species reported in Europe
  as of 2010.     These
  small insects are only 2-3.2 mm long and they are are black or yellow;
  macropterous, brachypterous or entirely wingless.  The forewing has a large stigma (except in males of
  Lagynodinae).  The antennae have 9
  flagellar segments in both sexes.  The
  metasoma has a constricted, collar.   Very
  little has been reported on their hosts and habits, but some species are
  known to be  primary parasitoids of
  Coccoidea (Homoptera), Neuroptera, and puparia of Diptera, and some are
  hyperparasitoids of Aphididae (Homoptera) through Aphidiinae
  (Braconidae).  One species in
  California parasitizes Mecoptera (Boreidae). 
  There are two subfamilies: 
  Megaspilinae and Lagynodinae. 
  The former subfamily is cosmopolitan and has more than 11 genera; the
  latter has two genera with dimorphic sexes. 
  There are more than 456 species described species worldwide as of
  2010.   --------------------------------        Superfamily: 
  Chalcidoidea -- <Overview>; <General References> --          This is a large Superfamily of
  important insects that have been deployed successfully in biological control
  worldwide.  The number of species is
  debatable but many specialists admit to being aware of only a fraction of
  those still awaiting discovery.  Their
  taxonomy is often difficult as the characters used often show wide variation.
  Most  species are  small or very tiny, some being  less than 0.4 mm in long.  Chalcids occur almost everywhere, but
  because of their small size they are usually overlooked.. Their habitat is in
  a variety of situations, principally on flowers and plant foliage. They
  usually hold their wings flat over the abdomen when at rest, and many seem to
  jump when they begin to fly. .           Wing venation is a key diagnostic,
  and the antennae are usually elbowed and never contain more than 13
  segments.  The pronotum is quadrate
  and does not reach the tegulae, and there is usually a prepectus present on
  the side of the thorax.  Most of the
  chalcids are dark to black in color, but many are blue or green in color with
  a metallic sheen.  Most species have
  reduced wing venation, and there is a lot of variation in body shape.  Some have peculiar, even bizarre, shapes.
  The wings are reduced or absent in some groups.             Most of the chalcids are
  parasitoids of other insects, attacking the egg or larval stage of their
  hosts. Most hosts are Lepidoptera, Diptera, Coleoptera, and Homoptera.  Because these host groups contain many
  agricultural pests, it is obvious that the chalcids are a valuable group for
  natural control. Many species have been imported into different countries for
  biological control. The larvae of few species are phytophagous feeding inside
  seeds, stems, or galls.            
  Agaonidae
  --. <Habits>; <Adults>   There are two species of
  fig
  wasps,
  Blastophaga psenes (L.) and Secundeisenia mexicana (Ashmead), in
  North America, with B. psenes
  having been introduced to allow for the production of some commercial figs.     --------------------------------             The Smyrna fig, which is
  grown in California, produces fruits only when it is pollinated with pollen
  from the wild fig, or caprifig, the pollination being accomplished by fig
  wasps. These develop in a gall in flowers of the caprifig. The blind and
  flightless males emerge first and may copulate with females inside the galls.
  The female, on emerging from the gall, collects pollen from male flowers of
  the Capri fig and stores it in special baskets or corbiculae. The
  female pollinates figs of both types (Smyrna fig and Capri fig), but
  oviposits successfully only in the shorter flowers of the Capri fig. Fig
  growers usually aid in the process of Smyrna fig pollination by placing in
  the fig trees branches of the wild fig.   -------------------------------- Aphelinidae.
  --<Habits>;
  <Adults> & <Juveniles> -- The group is valuable
  in the biological control of other insects.     --------------------------------             Chalcididae. --
  <Habits>;
  <Adults> & <Juveniles>
  -- These are medium sized wasps about
  2.2-8 mm long.  Their hind femora are
  swollen and bear teeth.  The
  chalcidids have antennae that are bent and very small.  The body is laterally compressed.  They are distinguished from the leucospidids
  by having their ovipositor short and their wings not folded longitudinally
  when resting.  The eggs are produced parthenogenetically
  at the rate of 300-400.               The chalcidids are parasitoids of
  Lepidoptera, Diptera, and Coleoptera, and some are hyperparasitoids that
  attack tachinids or ichneumonids. The clover seed chalcid,
  Bruchophagus platyptera (Walker),
  is a serious pest of alfalfa seed and clover.  Destruction can exceed 85 percent.  The eggs are deposited through the seed pod, and only one larva
  will develop per seed.  Pupation
  occurs in the seed.  Control is
  especially difficult and involves eliminating light where seed is stored, and
  synchronizing seed production with periods of low pest activity.    --------------------------------              (Elasmidae = old
  category). -- <Habits>;
  <Adults> & <Juveniles>  --             Elasmus is the only Genus in what is presently the
  subfamily Elasminae and there are about 205 species distributed
  worldwide. They are mostly parasitoids or hyperparasitoids of Lepidoptera
  larvae, but a few species are parasitoids of Polistes spp. larvae.     --------------------------------            
  Encyrtidae.
  -- <Habits>; <Adults-1> & <Adults-2>; &  <Juveniles> -- This
  is a large and worldwide group, with more than 372 North American species
  known. They average 1.1-2.5 mm in length and are distinguished by a broad
  convex mesopleura, whereas in most of the chalcids the mesopleura have a
  groove for the femora, but this groove is absent in the encyrtids.       The
  encyrtids differ from the eupelmids by having a convex mesonotum convex and
  lacking parapsidal furrows or have them but incomplete. Most species are
  parasitoids of aphids, scale insects, and whiteflies, but there are also
  species that attack insects in other orders.   Polyembryony occurs in some of the species.   --------------------------------          
  Eucharitidae.
  -- (= Eucharidae) <Habits>;
  <Adults> &  <Juveniles> -- These
  are distinctive in their appearance and habits. They are medium-sized, black
  or metallic blue or green in color, with the abdomen petiolate and the
  scutellum sometimes spined.  The
  thorax appears humpbacked. They are parasitoids of the pupae of ants               The eggs are laid in large numbers
  on the leaves or buds and hatch into tiny flattened larvae called planidia.
  These planidia lie in wait on vegetation or on the ground and attach to
  passing ants, which carry them to the ant nests. Once in the nest, the
  planidia leave the worker ant that and attach to ant larvae; they do little
  or no feeding on the larvae of the ant, but feed after the larva has pupated.   --------------------------------          
  Eulophidae.
  -- <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles>  -- This
  is a large group with more than 125 North American species known.  They are small insects averaging 1.2-4 mm
  long.  They parasitize a variety of
  hosts that includes some major pests of agricultural crops.  The 4-segmented tarsi and the axillae,
  which extends forward beyond the tegulae, distinguishes them  Many species are brightly colored and the
  males of some have pectinate antennae.               Some species are
  hyperparasitoids, and there are some bizarre phenomena regarding
  hyperparasitism and sex in the eulophids that attack scale insects.  In the genus Coccophagus, the
  females develop as parasitoids of scale insects, while the males develop as
  hyperparasitoids attacking parasitoids of scale insects, which may even be
  females of their own species.   --------------------------------          
  Eupelmidae.
  -- <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles>  -- This is a large family
  with over 95 North American species known. They resemble encyrtids, but they
  have a flatter mesonotum and parapsidal furrows are present. Some apterous or
  have very short wings.                 Many are able to jump and they often tumble around after
  jumping, before gaining a grip; their jumping is facilitated by their ability
  to bend the head and abdomen up over the thorax, much as occurs in click
  beetles. The members of this group attack a wide variety of hosts; a number
  of species are known to attack hosts in different orders; and a few are
  parasitoids of spiders.    --------------------------------            
  Eurytomidae.
  -- <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles>  -- The eurytomids resemble
  perilampids by having the thorax coarsely punctated, but differ in that they
  have the abdomen rounded or oval and compressed. They are black, with the
  thorax, head, and antennae usually hairy.  
  They are more slender insects than the perilampids.               Their habits vary with some being
  parasitic and some phytophagous.    --------------------------------            
  Leucospidae
  (Leucospididae). --
  <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles>  -- Leucospids are usually
  black-and-yellow insects, and they are parasitoids of bees and wasps. They
  are rare, but may sometimes be found on flowers. They are stout-bodied, have
  the wings folded longitudinally at rest, and resemble small yellow jackets.
  The ovipositor is long and curves upward and forward over the abdomen, ending
  over the posterior part of the thorax. Like the chalcidids, the leucospidids
  have the hind femora greatly swollen and toothed on the ventral side (Borror
  et al. 1989).     --------------------------------            
  Mymaridae.
  -- <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles> The fairy flies are
  tiny insects, mostly less than a millimeter long,  with linear hind wings. 
  They attack insect eggs, and some species attack the eggs of aquatic
  insects. This group contains some of the smallest insects known; one species
  of Aldptus has a body length of only 0.19 mm.     --------------------------------            
  Ormyridae.
  -- <Habits>; <Adults>   Ormyridae resemble the
  Torymidae, but have the parapsidal sutures indistinct or absent and have a
  very short ovipositor. They are parasitoids of gall insects.     --------------------------------          
  Perilampidae.
  -- <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles> -- Perilampids are stout
  chalcids with a large thorax that is pocked. 
  Their abdomen is small, shiny and triangular shaped.  Some species are metallic green that
  resembles cuckoo wasps, while others are black.                 These wasps occur on flowers, and
  most species are hyperparasitoids that attack Diptera and Hymenoptera which
  are parasitoids of caterpillars.  Some
  attack free-living insects in various orders. Perilampus  platygdster Say is a hyperparasitoid that
  attacks Meteorus dimididtus Cresson, a braconid parasite of the grape
  leaf folder. The perilampids, like the eucharitids, lay their eggs on
  foliage, and the eggs hatch into larvae of the planidium type.  The planidia remain on the foliage, attach
  to a passing host and penetrate into its body cavity. If a hyperparasitic
  species enters a caterpillar that is not parasitized, it usually does not
  develop, but if the caterpillar is parasitized, then the perilampid larva
  usually remains inactive in the caterpillar until the caterpillar parasitoid
  has pupated, and then attacks the parasitoid. The perilampids regularly
  attack the pupae of tachinids, braconids, or ichneumonids.   --------------------------------            
  Pteromalidae.
  -- <Habits>; Subfamilies of Pteromalidae  <Adults>
  & <Juveniles>   -- The
  PteromaIids are a large group of about 400 North American species.  They are tiny black or metallic-green or
  bronze wasps . They are parasitic and attack a wide variety of hosts with
  many being valuable in the biological control of crop pests. The adults of
  many species feed on the body fluids of the host, which exude from punctures
  made by the parasite's ovipositor (see Photo #3 to the right below).  [For
  Subfamilies please see <nearct-2.key.htm>]               In  Habrocytus cerealellae (Ashmead)
  that attacks larvae of the angoumois grain moth and where the host larvae are
  in the seed and out of reach of the adult pteromalid, a viscous fluid is
  secreted from the ovipositor that is then formed into a feeding
  tube extending down to the host
  larva. The adult sucks up the body fluids of the host through this tube.   --------------------------------          
  Rotoitidae.
  -- <Habits>; <Adults>   This family is confined to
  New Zealand, and there is very little information about the biology of its
  members.  Detailed information is
  currently being acquired for this family     --------------------------------            
  Signiphoridae. (Thysanidae) 
  -- <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles> -- These are
  small, thick-bodied chalcids that attack scale insects, whiteflies, and other
  Homoptera or are hyperparasitoids of the chalcids that attack Homoptera.     --------------------------------            
  Tanaostigmatidae.
  -- <Habits>; <Adults>   Four rare species in this
  family are known from the Southwestern United States and Florida.  The larvae are primarily gall makers.     --------------------------------            
  Tetracampidae.
  -- <Habits>; <Adults>   This
  is a small family wasps that are parasitoids of phytophagous insects,
  primarily Diptera. There were 44 species identified by 2010, but they rare in
  the Americas The males of many species
  have 4 segmented tarsi, which is common in the Eulophidae), but females
  always have 5 tarsal segments that is found in Pteromalidae. The antennae of
  both males and females are like the Pteromalidae.   There are many fossil
  recoveries and their relationships to other Chalcidoidea are not well
  studied.     --------------------------------            
  Torymidae.
  -- <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles> -- Torymids
  are elongated, metallic-green and average 2.2-4.5 mm long.   There is a long ovipositor; the hind
  coxae are large, and there are clear parapsidal sutures on the thorax.               There are both parasitic and
  phytophagous species: the TorylriInae, Erimennae, and Monodontomennae attack
  gall insects and caterpillars; the Podagriorunae attack mantid eggs; and the
  Idarrunae and MegastiglriInae attack seeds (Borror et al., 1989).   --------------------------------             Trichogrammatidae.
  -- Trichogrammatidae
  <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles> -- Trichogrammatids
  are tiny insects, 0.3-1.1 mm long,. 
  The three-segmented tarsi, and the microscopic hairs of the wings that
  are usually arranged in rows, distinguish them and the rather short head that
  is somewhat concave posteriorly. The members of this group are parasitoids
  attacking eggs of their hosts. Some species have been reared in large numbers
  to aid in the control of orchard pests.     --------------------------------       Superfamily:  Cynipoidea. -- <Overview> --           This
  group includes mostly small or tiny insects with a reduced wing venation .
  Most species are black, and the abdomen is usually shiny and compressed. The
  antennae are filiform, the pronotum extends back to the tegulae, and the
  ovipositor issues from anterior to the apex of the abdomen.              Austrocynipidae.
  -- This
  is one of the most rare groups of Hymenoptera that is native to Australia
  with only one species, Austrocynips mirabilis.   A pterostigma in the radial cell of the
  forewing distinguishes it from other Cynipoidea.  Also the posterior margin of the pronotum hangs over the
  anterior margin of the mesopleuron. 
  The group was originally placed in a subfamily of Cynipidae, but it
  now known to be phylogenetically basic to other members of the superfamily.              
  Austrocynips mirabilis was reared as a parasitoid from a Lepidoptera
  moth in the cone of an Araucaria sp. belonging to the Family
  Araucariaceae. 
 --------------------------------             Cynipidae.
  -- Cynipidae
  <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles>. -- The gall wasps
  are
  divided into three subfamilies,
  of which two (Eucoilinae
  and Charipinae)
  are parasitic and the third (Cyniplnae)
  have gall makers or gall inquilines; a little over a hundred species of the
  first two subfamilies occur in the United States, compared with some
  640 Cyniplnae (Borror et al., 1989).             Subfamilies:                  Cynipinae. -- Habits; 
  Adults  
  Juveniles  The "gall wasps" are a large group, and many species
  are quite common. They are small to minute, usually black insects that are
  distinguished by their shape and wing venation. The abdomen is oval, compressed,
  and shining, and the second tergum covers about half or more of the abdomen.
  The Cynipinae differ from the Charipinae in that they are larger  and the thorax usually has coarse
  sculpturing. .           Each species of gall maker forms a
  characteristic gall in a particular part of a plant, the galls being much
  more often noticed than are the insects. Many of the gall wasps form galls on
  oak.  Some galls harbor a single
  insect, while many insects develop in others. The inquilines among the gall
  wasps live in galls made by some other gall insect. Most of the gall wasps
  are of little economic importance, but some of their galls have been used as
  a source of tannic acid and others have been used as a source of certain
  dyes.             Many gall wasps have a complex
  life history with two different generations a year. The summer generation is
  spent in one type of gall, and the wasps, consisting entire of females emerge
  in autumn.  They reproduce
  parthenogenetically. The eggs of this generation hatch and develop in a
  different type of gall, and the adults that emerge in the early part of the
  following summer contain both  males
  and females. Both the adult insects and the galls of these two generations
  may be quite different in appearance (Borror et al., 1989).                  Eucoilinae. -- Habits;  Adults   Juveniles  These are
  distinguished by a rounded rise on the scutellum.  They are all internal parasitoids of
  dipterous larvae, emerging from the puparium.  Many species inhabit the animal dung environment or are found
  around rotting fruit.  Most species
  occur in the tropics, where they are very abundant.  More  than 77 species in
  North American .Eucoilines have been reared from hosts from many habitats,
  and several species have been reared from flies breeding in fruit. The most
  reliable host records from Tephritidae are for the genera Aganaspis
  and Odontosema. Many of the species reared from fruits are parasitoids
  of Drosophilidae, Pnoridae Lonchaeidae, and other flies associated with ripe
  and decomposing fruit.                  Charipinae. -- Habits;  Adults   Juveniles   These are tiny insects, 2.1 mm long or less.  They have a smooth thorax, and they are
  hyperparasitoids, attacking braconids, which are aphid parasitoids. They
  are hyperparasitoids of Hemiptera.The African genera Alloxysta and Phaenoglyphis are hyperparasitoids of Aphididae via Aphidiinae
  (Hymenoptera: Braconidae) and Aphelinidae (Hymenoptera: Chalcidoidea).
  Species of the African geners Apocharips and Dilyta are hyperparasitoids of Psyllidae via Encyrtidae (Hymenoptera:
  Chalcidoidea).   --------------------------------           Figitidae.
  -- <Habits>; <Adults>   These
  are parasitoids of the pupae of lacewings
  and Diptera. The family is
  divided into three subfamilies, primarily on the basis of the structure of
  the abdomen: the Anacharitinae, which have the abdomen distinctly petiolate
  and the second tergum longer than the third ( ), attack the cocoons of
  lacewings (Chrysopidae); the Aspiceratinae, in which the second abdominal
  tergum is narrow and much shorter than the third, attack the pupae of syrphid
  flies; the Figitinae, in which the second tergum is only slightly shorter
  than the third , attack the pupae of various Diptera (Borror
  et al., 1989).     --------------------------------           Ibaliidae. -- Ibaliidae <Habits>; <Adults>   The ibaliids are large
  7-18 mm long and have the abdomen elongated. 
  They are parasitoids of horntails. 
  They are a rare group that is not often observed or collected.     --------------------------------           Liopteridae.
  -- Liopteridae
  <Habits>; <Adults>   These insects have a
  petiolate abdomen which is attached above the bases of the hind coxae. Three
  are rare species about which is very little known.     --------------------------------       Superfamily: 
  Evanioidea. -- <Overview>
  --              In this Superfamily the
  abdomen is attached high above the hind 
  coxae, the antennae are filiform and have 13 or 14 segments.  The trochanters have two segments, and the
  front wing venation is usually 
  complete and there is a costal cell. Some (Gasteruptlidae and
  Aulacidae) superficially resemble ichneumons. All are parasitoids of other
  insects.            
  Aulacidae.
  -- <Habits>; <Adults>   Aulacids resemble
  Gasteruptiidae, but they are more black with a red abdomen.  The antennae are longer, and there are two
  recurrent veins in the front wings. 
  They are parasitoids of the larvae of wood boring beetles and
  xiphydriid wood wasps.  Adults occur
  around logs where they find their hosts.     --------------------------------           Evaniidae. --  <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles>. -- The ensign wasps  are black, and resemble spiders.  They average 10-16 mm long. The abdomen is
  small and oval and is attached by a petiole to the propodeum much above the
  base of the hind coxae ; it is carried almost like a flag (hence the common
  name for this family.) These
  wasps are parasitoids of the egg capsules of cockroaches and may be found in
  buildings or other places where cockroaches roam.     --------------------------------             Gasteruptiidae
  (Gasteruptiidae).
  -- Gasteruptiidae
  <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles> -- These
  resemble ichneumonids, but they have shorter antennae and a costal cell in
  the front wings.  The head is
  projected out on a neck. They have one submarginal cell or none and one
  recurrent vein or none.  They are
  black insects, and the ovipositor of the female is about as long as the body.
  Adults are common and are usually found on flowers, especially wild parsnip,
  wild carrot, and related species. The larvae are parasitoids of solitary
  wasps and bees.     --------------------------------       Superfamily:  Ichneumonoidea. -- <Overview>             Apozygidae. -- <Habits>; <Adults>   This
  is a little studied family where there is only one Genus and two species
  known from Chile, South America.     --------------------------------             Braconidae. -- <Habits>; <Adults-1> & <Adults-2> & <Adults-3> &  <Juveniles>. -- All
  species of the braconids are parasitic on other insects.  They sting the host and thereby paralyze
  it.               There are more than 1850 North
  American species most of which are beneficial. The adults are all fairly
  small rarely exceeding 16 mm in long. 
  Many are stout-bodied than the ichneumons, and the abdomen is about as
  long as the head and the thorax combined. 
  They are similar to ichneumonids by lacking a costal cell, but they
  differ by not having more than one recurrent vein.  Many species are valued as natural controls of pest insects.              Braconids and ichneumonids have
  similar habits, but unlike the ichneumonids many pupate in silken cocoons on
  the outside of the body of their hosts, while others spin silken cocoons
  entirely apart from the host. 
  Polyembryony occurs in a few species, primarily in the genus Macrocentrus, each egg of M.
  grandis Goidanich, a parasitoid of the European
  corn borer, develops into from 16 to
  24 larvae.                  Subfamily:  Aphidiinae. --  <Habits>;
  <Adults>   The Aphidiinae are a subfamily of parasitic wasps that have aphids as
  their hosts. The larva of Praon sp. exits from the hollowed shell of
  the aphid to pupate in a cocoon, but most Aphidiinae pupate inside the dead
  aphid.  Some species have been
  deployed for biological control  of
  aphids               
   Although they have been
  considered as a separate family, the Aphidiidae, the Aphidiinae are now grouped with the Braconidae.  Their
  relationship to other braconid subfamilies is not fully understood.  Aphidiines are
  koinobiont endoparasitoids of adult and immature aphids. While the larva of
  the 2–3 mm long Praon leaves the hollowed shell of the aphid from
  below to pupate in a volcano-like cocoon, most other Aphidiinae pupate inside
  the dead aphid and break out afterwards. 
  They range worldwide, but are mostly found in the Northern
  Hemisphere.  Several species have been
  introduced to countries outside of their natural range, both accidentally and
  purposefully for biological control. --------------------------------              Ichneumonidae. -- <Habits>; <Adults-1> & <Adults-2> & <Adults-3>; & <Juveniles>. -- The
  ichneumonids are one of the most important parasitic insect groups and also
  one of the largest in the Insecta. 
  There have been over 3400 species found in North America alone.  The adults vary in size, form, and
  coloration, but most resemble slender wasps. 
  They have a long, narrowed appearance, and there is a large stigma on
  the forewing.  They differ from the
  stinging wasps by having antennae that are longer and with more
  segments.   Their trochanters are
  2-segmented (1- segmented in the stinging wasps), and they a costal cell in
  the front wings is absent.               The ovipositor can
  inject eggs into the host, which may be another ecto- or endoparasitoid.  In many species the ovipositor is quite
  long, often longer than the body, arising anteriorly to the tip of the
  abdomen being permanently extended. 
  In the stinging wasps the ovipositor issues from the tip of the
  abdomen and is withdrawn into the abdomen when not being used. The
  ichneumonids differ from the braconids by having two recurrent veins whereas
  the braconids have only one or none and in having an abdomen that is longer
  than the head and thorax combined. In many species there is a considerable
  difference in the appearance  Between
  males and females.             The ichneumons attack a variety of
  hosts, though most species attack only few kinds. There are few groups of
  insects that are not hosts of some ichneumonid, and some species in this
  family attack spiders. Most ichneumonids are internal parasitoids of the
  immature stages of their hosts. The parasitoid may complete its development
  in the stage of the host in which the egg is laid or in some later stage.            
  Subfamily: 
  Agriotypinae. -- Habits;  Adults   Juveniles   This is is a Palaearctic subfamily of the parasitic
  Ichneumonidae.  Agriotypus is
  the only genus in the group  .The
  known species are aquatic ectoparasitoids of Trichoptera pupae.  The placement Agriotypus is not
  clear as it has been classified with both the Proctotrupoidea and  as a separate family of Ichneumonoidea.   --------------------------------             Paxylommatidae. --  <Habits>; <Adults>  Paxylommatidae: the correct family-group name for Hybrizon
  fallen (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonoidea), with figures of unusual antennal
  sensillal.  Species are being
  described from Baltic and Rovno amber. 
  Van Achterberg, C.   1999.  The West
  Palaearctic species of the subfamily Paxylommatinae 9Hymenoptera:
  Ichneumonidae), with special reference to the genus Hybrizon Fallen.  Zool. Med. Leiden 73(2); 30.iv. 11-26,
  figs. 1-42     --------------------------------       Superfamily:  Megalyroidea. -- <Overview>            
  Megalyridae.
  -- <Habits>; <Adults>   Mason (1993) reported that
  the Megalyridae are mainly parasitoids of Coleoptera larvae that are found
  under tree bark.  One species parasitizes
  a species of Pemphredonidae.  There
  are about 11 species in Africa, South America, southeast Asia and Australia.   The
  body is sturdy and cylindrical (Mason 1993). 
  The gena has a large, spacious, oval pit where the antennal scape
  occurs.  The mesoscutum is flattened
  and has large triangular axillae, and in most but one genus there is a
  pronounced median groove that bisects the mesoscutum.     --------------------------------       Superfamily:  Mymarommatoidea (or Serphitoidea). --              Mymarommatidae.
  -- (=
  Callimomidae) <Habits>; <Adults>   This
  is a
  very small family of tiny insects. Only 10 living species in 1 genus have
  been described with others being known only as fossils.  They had occurred worldwide. So that  more are certain to be found.  Nevertheless, they they are easily missed
  and hardto study because of their small size of only 0.3 mm. long.              
  Little is known about the biology of these insects but because of
  their size, and simple ovipositor, it is thought that they are parasitoids on
  the eggs of other insects. They were originally placed as a subfamily of the
  chalcidoid family Mymaridae but, because of morphological differences, are
  now considered in their own superfamily, Mymarommatoidea, and their similarity to Mymaridae is probably a
  case of convergent evolution.            
  There is no agreement as to the nearest living relatives of the
  Mymarommatidae.  It haas been
  suggested that nearest relatives are the extinct family Serphitidae, and thus
  the Mymarommatidae could be considered as "living fossils", a
  surviving lineage of an extinct superfamily Serphitoidea.    --------------------------------        Superfamily: 
  Platygastroidea             Platygastridae.
  -- (= Platygasteridae) <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles> -- These are
  tiny, shining-black insects with sparce wing venation so that they resemble
  chalcids.  The antennae usually have
  10 segments and are attached very low on the face, next to the clypeus . Most
  species are parasitoids of the larvae of
  Cecidomylidae.  Platygdster hiemalis Forbes has been successfully deployed
  as a biological control the Hessian fly. Polyembryony occurs in some species,
  with as many as 20 progeny emanating 
  from one egg.      Most of the platygasterids are of average
  appearance, insects, but the genus Inostemma are different in that
  they have a long structure that arises from the dorsum of the first abdominal
  segment and extends forward over the thorax, which serves as a sheath  for the ovipositor.     --------------------------------            Scelionidae. -- <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles> -- Scelionids
  are small insects that are parasitoids of insect or spider eggs.  Some species have been successfully
  deployed in the biological control of crop pests. The females of some
  species, mainly those that attack the eggs of grasshoppers or mantids, attach
  themselves to the female of the host species and ride on it until the host
  lays its eggs, after which they depart from the host and attack its eggs. In
  a few such cases the female may do some feeding on the adult of the host, but
  usually the adult host serves only as a means of disemination. This behavior
  is called phoresy
  and is found also in the chalcid family
  Eucharltidae     --------------------------------       Superfamily:  Proctotrupoidea. -- <Overview> --              All species in this
  Superfamily are parasitoids that attack the immature stages of other insects.
  Most are small or very tiny, black and shiny.  They resemble chalcids, cynipids, or some of the scolioid or
  bethyloids. The smaller species have a reduced wing venation like the
  chalcids, but differ by the structure of the thorax and ovipositor.  The pronotum is triangular in lateral view
  and projects to the tegulae, and the ovipositor emanates from the tip of the
  abdomen rather than from anterior. 
  Spome have their abdomen dorsoventrally flattened with the lateral
  edges sharp. Proctotrupoids are not as widespread as the chalcids or
  ichneumonids, and some are rare. 
  There are about 955 species known to occur in North America.            Austroniidae. -- <Habits>; <Adults>   Little is known about the
  biology of these proctotrupids, but they are thought to be parasitoids of
  other insects. There is only one described genus with 3 species, all from
  Australia     --------------------------------             Diapriidae. -- <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles> -- Diapriids
  are small to tiny black insects, most of which are parasites of immature
  Diptera. The form of the head distinguishes them; the antennae arise on a
  shelf like projection in about the middle of the face.               These insects occur near the
  ground in wooded areas, for they attack fungus gnats (MycetophIlidae) and
  other flies breeding in fungi.  Some species have been introduced into
  California for the biological control of Hippelates
  eye gnats (see ch-20.htm).   --------------------------------           Heloridae.
  -- <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles> -- There is but one North
  American species known, Helorus paradixus (Provancher), a black insect
  about 4.5 mm long with a more or less complete venation in the front wings.
  This species is a Parasite of the larvae of chrysopid lacewings.  Adults emerge from the host's cocoon.   --------------------------------             Maamingidae. -- Little is
  known of the biology of this family save that it has been collected from
  isolated islands near New Zealand. 
  There are two genera with two described species.               A good references is:  Early, J. W., L. Masner, I. D. Naumann
  & A. D. Austin.  2001.  Maamingidae, a new family of proctotrupoid wasp
  (Insecta: Hymenoptera) from New Zealand. Invertebrate taxonomy, 15: 341-352.   --------------------------------           Mesoserphidae. -- These are
  parasitoids of immature stages of other insects. Most species are small
  black, and may often be confused with cynipids or chalcidoids. The smallest
  species have a reduced wing venation, but they may be separated from
  chalcidoids by the structure of the mesosoma and ovipositor. The pronotum in
  the proctotrupoids is more triangular when viewed laterally and it extends to
  the tegulae. The ovipositor emanates from the tip of the metasoma rather than
  from anterior to the tip               A good reference is :  Rasnitsyn A.P. 1986. New hymenopterous
  insects of the family Mesoserphidae. Vestnik zool. 2: 19-25 (in Russian).   --------------------------------            
  Monomachidae. -- <Habits>; <Adults>   The body of members of
  this family is about 9.5-11.2 mm long (Masner 1993).  They are sexually dimorphic.  Females have a sickle-shaped attenuated
  metasoma, males have a pedunculate metasoma. 
  The mandibles are very huge. 
  The pronotum has a sharp transverse ridge that is capable of sliding
  over the anterior part of the mesoscutum. 
  The propodeum is cone-shaped, without a median keel.  The metacoxa is inserted relatively remote
  from the propodeal foramen.  The
  forewing usually has 5 closed cells and a relatively narrow stigma.  The metasomal segment 1 (petiole) is very
  long and slender, and metasomal tergum 2 consists of 1 tergum that is not the
  longest segment.  The ovipositor is
  extremely short, concealed insider the metasomal segment 8.               Some Neotropical species are light
  green and a few multicolored.  In
  Australia one species has been reared from Stratiomyidae (Diptera).  Adults of the Australian species are
  active during winter.  In 2
  undescribed Neotropical species (from Peru and Chile) the female is
  micropterous.  The family has 2 genera
  and ca. 20 rare species, mostly in the New World tropics (Guerrero, Mexico to
  Argentina and Chile), with only a few additional ones in Australia and New
  Guinea.  They are all apparently of
  Southern Hemispheric origin.              Some references are: Musetti, L.; Johnson,
  N.F. 2000: First documented record of Monomachidae (Hymenoptera: Proctotrupoidea)
  in New Guinea, and description of two new species. Proceedings of the
  Entomological Society of Washington, 102: 957-963.    Musetti, L. & N. F.
  Johnson. 2004: Revision of the New World species of the genus Monomachus
  Klug (Hymenoptera: Proctotrupoidea, Monomachidae). Canadian entomologist,
  136: 501-552.    Naumann, I. D. 1985: The Australian species
  of Monomachidae (Hymenoptera: Proctotrupoidea), with a revised diagnosis of
  the family. Journal of the Australian Entomological Society, 24: 261-274.   --------------------------------            Pelecinidae. -- <Habits>;
  <Adults> & <Juveniles> --
  These parasitize the larvae of Phyllophaga
  spp. (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae) There are three species known in one genus (Pelecinus),
  which are distributed in the Western Hemisphere.  There is only one North American genus with one species: Pelecinus
  polyturator Drury. Worldwide, there is only one extant genus, Pelecinus,
  with three recognized species (Galloway 2008):     --------------------------------            Peradeniidae. --
  <Habits>; <Adults>   The biology of these
  proctotrupids is unstudied, but they have been collected during the winter
  months in Australia.  There is one
  genus, Peradenia, with two species.     --------------------------------             Proctorenyxidae.
  -- The biology of these wasps remains unstudied, but they are believed to be
  parasitoids on other insects.             There is one genus with one
  described sp.: Proctorenyxa incredibilis.   --------------------------------            Proctotrupidae. -- (= Serphidae) <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles>; Serphidae (now with Proctotrupidae) <Habits>; <Adults>   Most Proctotrupids range
  in size from 3 to 7 mm long.  They are
  distinguished by a large stigma in the front wing, beyond which is a very
  small marginal cell.  Some species are
  parasitoids of beetles, and flies.     --------------------------------            Roproniidae. -- <Habits>; <Adults>   There are three rare North
  American species of Ropronia. The adults are 8-12 mm long and have a
  laterally flattened, triangular and petiolate abdomen and a more or less
  complete venation in the front wing . The immature stages are parasitoids of
  sawflies.     --------------------------------            Vanhorniidae. -- <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles> -- There
  is a single North American species, Vanhornia
  eucnemidarum Crawford, which is a parasitoid of the larvae of
  eucnemid beetles.     --------------------------------       Superfamily:  Stephanoidea. -- <Overview>            Stephanidae.
  -- Stephanidae
  <Habits>; <Adults>   Stephanids are a small of
  rare hymenopterans that are parasitoids of the larvae of wood-boring beetles.
  The adults vary in length from 4-20 mm.  
  They are slim and resemble ichneumonids with their long ovipositor.
  The head is quite spherical, and protrudes on a neck.  It also has a crown of about four or five
  teeth around the median ocellus.  The
  hind coxae are long, and the hind femora are swollen and also have teeth.
  Most American species occur in the western Nearctic.     --------------------------------     Superfamily:  Trigonaloidea. -- <Overview>            Trigonalidae.
  -- <Habits>; <Adults> & <Juveniles> -- Trigonalids
  are a small group of rare hymenopterans of average size and quite brightly
  colored.   Their bodies are stout and
  they resemble wasps, but have long and multisegmented antennae.               Trigonalids are parasitoids of
  Vespidae or hyperparasitoids of caterpillars. The very small eggs are laid in
  large numbers on plant foliage. In the case of the species attacking
  caterpillar parasites, the eggs hatch when eaten by a caterpillar, and the
  wasp larvae attack the ichneumon, tachinid, or other parasitoid larva that may
  be present. In the species that attack vespid larvae, the eggs are eaten by a
  caterpillar, which is in turn eaten by a vespid wasp, which in regurgitating
  the caterpillar and feeding it to its young, transfers the trigonalid larvae
  from the caterpillar to the wasp larvae (Borror & DeLong,
  1954).   = = = = = = = = = = = = =
  = = =    Hymenoptera
  Most Common in the Neotropics             Paxylommatidae. --  <Habits>; <Adults>  The correct family-group name for Hybrizon fallen
  (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonoidea), with figures of unusual antennal
  sensillal.  Species are being
  described from Baltic and Rovno amber. 
  Van Achterberg, C.   1999.  The West
  Palaearctic species of the subfamily Paxylommatinae 9Hymenoptera:
  Ichneumonidae), with special reference to the genus Hybrizon Fallen.  Zool. Med. Leiden 73(2); 30.iv. 11-26,
  figs. 1-42     --------------------------------             Entedontidae. -- Species in this
  family have been bred from the larvae of the Rice Leaf Miner (Diptera:
  Agromyzidae).   Studies are conducted
  at the Universidad Nacional de La Plata in Argentina.   
   --------------------------------             Tetrastichidae . -- Biological studies are
  conducted on Tetrastichus schoenobii 
  Ferriere, which is an egg parasitoid of the yellow rice borer, Scirpophaga
  incertulas (Walker).     --------------------------------             Sclerogibbidae. --  <Habits>;
  <Adults>   These wasps are distributed worldwide in warmer
  climates.  There ae 14 African species
  in 3 genera.  They are ectoparasitoids
  of Embioptera nymphs.  Pupations is in
  the host web.  They are solitary or gregarious ectoparasitoids of Embioptera
  (webspinners). The larvae stay attached to the metasomal intersegmental
  membranes of nymphal webspinners and pupate in the tunnels of their
  host.  Biological information is
  scarce.               Females are apterous while males are fully winged. They
  vary in length from 2.2 - 6.5 mm, and are distinguished by the antennae
  inserted just below a protruding shelf on the face; the antennae have 20 or
  more segments.  The head is triangular in lateral view and the front femur is swollen.  Females have an hourglass-shaped mesosoma,
  while the fore wing of males lacks a pterostigma and distal venation.  The hind wing has no closed cells but a
  large basal lobe.  --------------------------------             Cleptidae. --  <Habits>; <Adults>
  & <Juveniles>   In 1940 Cleptidae was represented by
  the genus Cleptes, in Europe, North
  America and Asia (Clausen 1940/62). 
  Indeed, in general appearance and behavior, and undescribed species of
  Cleptes from Korea, bore a close
  resemblance to parasitic Chrysididae. 
  Clausen (1940) noted that several other species were reared from
  sawfly cocoons in various parts of the world.       Adult female Cleptes
  sp. is very active, spending most of her time on the ground in search of
  sawfly cocoons.  When one is found,
  she gnaws a hole in the cocoon wall, and the extensible ovipositor is
  inserted by a backward thrust.  The
  3-jointed ovipositor is longer than the abdomen when extended.  The egg is placed horizontally on the host
  body in the mid-ventral curve of the abdomen but does not adhere.  When oviposition is complete, the female
  smears a quantity of mucilaginous material over the hole in the cocoon wall,
  thereby sealing it.  This spot of hard
  glistening material can recognize parasitized cocoons.  The oviposition behavior is almost
  identical to that of Chrysis
  shanghaiensis Smith, which
  attacks cocoons of Lepidoptera (Clausen 1940/62).   --------------------------------             Ampulicidae. --  (= Ampulicinae) 
  <Habits>; <Adults>
  & <Juveniles>  This family frequently treated as the subfamily  Ampulicinae of the Sphecidae, contains species that seldom dig burrows, but rather utilize
  natural cavities for nests, which are provisioned with immature
  cockroaches.  Williams (1919b)
  described the behavior of Dolichurus
  stantoni Ashm., which attacks
  nymphs of several genera of cockroaches. 
  The agile cockroaches are located by the female who grasps one by a
  cercus or leg, and then stings it in the throat or thorax.  As only partial paralysis ensues, the
  cockroach is able to continue slow movement. 
  Then the wasp grasps an antenna near the base and leads or drags the
  prey to the nest (Clausen 1940/1962). 
  The female positions the prey in the nest, and lays an egg rather
  obliquely on one of the middle coxae. 
  After hatching in 1-2 days, the larval feeding period is completed in
  4-5 days.  D. stantoni as
  introduced to Hawaii from the Philippines in 1917 and became well
  established.     ---------------------------------------   
   References   
  & <biology.ref.htm>, [Additional
  references may be found at:  MELVYL Library ]   | 
 
| Details
  of Insect Taxonomic Groups             Examples of beneficial species occur in almost every
  insect order, and considerable information on morphology and habits has been
  assembled.  Therefore, the principal groups
  of insect parasitoids and predators provide details that refer to the entire
  class Insecta.  These details are
  available at <taxnames.htm>.   |