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| HYMENOPTERA, Sphecidae (Philanthinae) (Sphecoidea) --  <Images>
  & <Juveniles>   Description & Statistics           
  This subfamilly is one of the largest groups in the Sphecidae,
  although there are only 9 identified genera. The subfamily has also been given
  family status at times. Members are solitary, predatory wasps, each genus
  with a unique  prey preferences.  Mature females dig tunnels in the ground
  to nest.             As with all other
  sphecoid wasps, the larvae are carnivorous, and females seek prey on which to
  lays their eggs.  They provision the
  nest cells with paralyzed, living prey that the larvae feed on    The notorious "bee wolf,"
  Philanthus triangulum F. (= apivorus
  Latr.) is of special concern to bee keepers in some parts of Europe.  An extended account of this insect in
  relation to honeybees was presented by Fabre (1891).  Female Philanthus
  kills the adult bee by stinging it in the throat, after which she begins an
  extensive malaxation of the throat by means of which the honey in the crop is
  forced up to the mouth, where it is consumed.  Alternate malaxation and feeding may continue for more than an
  hour.  Then the prey is dragged to the
  burrow, which extends 1 m or more into the soil and ends in a group of cells,
  in one of which the bee is placed. 
  The egg is then laid ventrally on the thorax.  Clausen (1940) mentioned that it is
  believed that the larvae are not able to mature on bees which have not been
  deprived of honey.  A much larger
  number of bees is killed than can be used for stocking the nest.   An extended account of the status
  of this pest in certain honey-producing sections of Germany is given by Thiem
  (1935).  In one area nearly 2-million
  bees, representing 48 hives, were destroyed in one season.  The following season, boys who had been
  employed for that purpose killed 31,000 Philanthus
  adults.  However, ca. 1/2 million
  emerged later anyway.  The factory and
  mine dumps of brown coal and salt waste in these areas seemed to provide
  exceptionally favorable conditions for the development of the wasp.  The only practical control appeared to be
  elimination of these favored breeding sites. 
  Sometimes covering the areas with soil and inducing grass to grow accomplished
  this.  Other measures involved
  individual treatment of the wasp burrows in the more sandy areas.             P. gibbosus
  Fab. kills its prey, adult Halictidae, at the time of capture, and
  considerable putrefaction occurs before larval feeding is complete (Reinhard
  1924).  The burrows may be several
  meters in length, comprising a number of cells.  From 8-16 bees are placed in each cell, and the egg is laid on
  the last of the series to be brought in, usually a small prey.  Great specialization is shown in the
  attack of Aphilanthops frigidus Smith on ants of the genus Formica (Wheeler 1913).  Only queen ants are attacked, and capture
  occurs only during the nuptial flight. 
  The wasp responds only to the visual stimulus of the winged
  individuals and ignores those lacking wings. 
  After stinging the queen, the wings are cut off and the body dragged
  into the burrow.  The egg is laid on
  an isolated ant which has been cut into two parts, and others are taken from
  storage and fed to the larva as it grows. 
  Because flights of any single ant species occur only during a short
  period, the wasp preys on a series of species during the season (Clausen
  1940/1962).   Species of the subfamily
  Philanthinae burrow in the soil, where they excavate a series of cells and
  store them with adult prey.  The
  dominant genus Philanthus is known
  to prey on various Hymenoptera, in particular Apoidea.   This group was considered as a
  subfamily of Philanthidae in the Apoidea by Finnamore & Michener
  (1993).  They are known from all
  regions except Australasia.  They are
  numerous around flowers, and their prey generally includes adult Apiformes in
  several families (including Apis mellifera L.).  This gave rise to the common name
  "bee-wolf.”   There were more
  than 152 species known by 2000.     Krombein (1981) keyed the species
  of Philanthidae of Sri Lanka and Bohart & Grissell (1975) keyed the
  Nearctic genera and species of Philanthidae   References:   Please refer to  <biology.ref.htm>, [Additional references
  may be found at:  MELVYL
  Library]   Bohart, R.M.
  & A. S. Menke. 1976. Sphecid Wasps of the World: a Generic Revision.
  University of California Press, Berkeley, California.    Menke, A.S.
  1967. Odontosphex Arnold, a genus of the Philanthinae, with a key to the tribes
  and genera of the subfamily (Hymenoptera; Sphecidae). Pan-Pacific
  Entomologist 43: 141-148.   |