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| HYMENOPTERA, Sphecidae (Apoidea) (formerly under Sphecoidea). --  <Images>
  & <Juveniles>   Please refer also to the following links for details on this
  group:    Sphecidae (Sphecinae) = Link 1   Description &
  Statistics            Sphecidae. -- 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.   Most species of Sphecinae construct their nests in the soil,
  although some also form them in hollow stems or construct mud cells on
  foliage, etc.  Some may confine
  themselves to a single host species, while others may attack individuals of
  several related families.  The pey
  varies, ranging from spiders to grasshoppers, mole crickets, locusts,
  lepidopterous larvae and cockroaches. 
  Among the common genera, Sceliphron
  and Chalybion store their nests
  with spiders.  C. cyaneum Dahlb. of
  North America utilizes the black widow spider. Chlorion, Podium, and Trigonaspis prey on a variety of
  Orthoptera; some species of Sphex attack
  larger Orthoptera, mainly grasshoppers; others of the genus store their nests
  with larvae of Lepidoptera.   Sphex aegypticus Lep. attacks migrating
  desert locusts in East Africa (Williams 1933).  In one season vast numbers of females may follow a locust
  migration, and large numbers of paralyzed locusts are stored in nests.  S.
  aegypticus    Piel (1933b) observed Sphex
  nigellus storing its nests with
  adults or nymphs of Conocephalus
  spp., etc.  Here nesting differs from
  the above examples in that the prey is stored in cells formed in hollow stems
  of bamboo.  Prey are completely
  paralyzed and the legs and antennae amputated before storage.  Nevertheless, the latter remain alive for
  4-6 days.  The cells are provisioned,
  and the end of the bamboo stem is closed with a blades of grass or stems.   Sphex lobatus F. develops on the cricket Brachytrypes portentosus Licht in tropical Asia (Hingston 1925, 1926).  It is thought to be specific in its
  prey.  The female searches for the host
  cell in the soil, drives out the occupant and then  pursues and captures it above ground.  A lengthy battle often ensues, but finally the parasitoid is
  able to grasp one of the wings with her mandibles, and the sting is then
  inserted in the thorax and finally the neck. 
  After paralyzing the cricket, the wasp drags it by its antennae back
  to the burrow from whence it came. 
  This is one of the few species of Sphecidae that makes no cell or
  burrow of its own.   Some species of Sphex
  supply their nests with caterpillars. 
  S. hirsuta Scop. attacks noctuid larvae, the latgter being nocturnal
  and during the day are found in the soil at the bases of their food plants
  (Bougy 1935).  Female wasps search for
  larger caterpillars in the soil, and sting them into permanent paralysis,
  first in the thoracic region and then in the posterior segments bearing the
  pseudopods.  While being dragged to
  the burrow on its back, the caterpillar's thorax is grasped between the wasps
  mandibles.  The egg is usually laid on
  the abdomen's dorsum.  When partly
  grown, the larva may enter the caterpillar body to complete feeding.   Prionyx atratum Lep. persues grasshopper
  nymphs in the southwestern United States. 
  A number of prey are stung at one time, but only the last one stung is
  used for provisioning the nest.  Thus
  the wasp is responsible for killing more grasshoppers than can be judged from
  its nest (Clausen 1940/1962).   Some South American species of Podium, that store their nests with nymphs and occasionally adult
  cockroaches of the genus Epilampra,
  were studied by Williams (1928). 
  Females have the habit of laying the egg on the prey just prior to
  dragging it into the burrow, which contrasts to the usual habit of
  ovipositing after the nest is fully provisioned.  As with other members of the family attacking Orthoptera, the
  egg is placed at the base of one of the coxae.  Nests are made in hard ground that is free of vegetation, and P. hazmatogastrum
  Spin. may even be found nesting frequently on the sides of termite mounds.   Clausen (1940) discussed the effect of the sting of female
  Sphecidae on the host.  It ranges from
  only temporary to permanent paralysis, and in some cases, to immediate
  death.  Crickets stored by S. lobatus
  recover rather completely in 10-15 min., but a considerable lethargy follows,
  for they make no effort to escape. 
  Noctuid larvae stung by S. hirsuta live a maximum of 39
  days.  In species attacking
  caterpillars, some females malaxate the venter of prey after it is
  stung.  Some species pinch the neck
  extensively, feeding on fluids that exudes from the prey's mouth.   Finnamore & Michener (1983), who placed them as a separate
  family in the Apoidea, noted that adults of ca. 230 species are fossorial or
  nest in preexisting cavities.  Their
  prey is orthopteroids, mainly Tettigoniidae (Grylloptera) and Acrididae
  (Orthoptera).  They are stout wasps
  and black or black and red, although a few species are metallic blue..  In North America there are 35 species in 4
  genera known as of 2000..   A key reference is Bohart & Menke (1976).   Further Description             This is cosmopolitan
  family of wasps that include mud daubers, digger wasps, and others that are
  known as  thread-waisted wasps. Older
  definitions of the Sphecidae and the more refined ones, where the seven sphecid
  subfamilies were each raised to family rank are now considered
  paraphyletic.  Thus, the most recent
  classification is closer to the conservative scheme; the families
  Heterogynaidae and Ampulicidae are the sister taxa to what are now two
  families the Sphecidae and Crabronidae. Most sphecoid wasps are now included
  in Crabronidae, and Sphecidae in a more restricted concept, more or less to
  what used to be the subfamily Sphecinae.             The biology of the
  Sphecidae is quite diverse; some sceliphrines even display early forms of
  sociality, and some sphecines produce many larvae in a single large brood
  cell. M Pre-existing cavities are preferred nesting sites, or they dig simple
  burrows in the soil.  There are also
  species that construct open nests of mud and even resin. All are predaceous,
  with the prey ranging from spiders to dictyopterans or orthopteroids to
  caterpillars of Lepidoptera or other Hymenoptera.  Most species mass provision their nests before laying eggs.   = = = = =
  = = = = = = =   References:   Please refer to  <biology.ref.htm>, [Additional references
  may be found at:  MELVYL
  Library]   Borror,
  D. J. & R. E. White. 1970. In: Page 350 and plate 16, A Field Guide to the
  Insects. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co.    Bland, R.
  G. & H. E. Jaques. 1978. How to Know the Insects.  In: Page 385, 3rd ed. Dubuque, Iowa: Wm. C. Brown Co. 409 p.    Borror,
  D. J., C. A. Triplehorn, and N. F. Johnson. 1989. An Introduction to the
  Study of Insects. In: Page 724, 6th ed. Philadelphia: Saunders College
  Publishing. 875 p.    Daly, H.
  V.,  J. T. Doyen, and A. H. Purcell
  III. 1998. Introduction to Insect Biology and Diversity. In: Page 597, 2nd
  ed. Oxford University Press. 680 p.    Goulet, H., Huber, J.T. 1993. Hymenoptera of
  the World. Agriculture Canada Research Branch, publication 1894/E. 668pp.   Stange, L. A.  2001. The Cicada Killers of
  Florida (Hymenoptera: Sphedidae). Fla. Dep. Agric. Cons. Serv., Div. Plant
  Ind., Entomology Circular No. 402. 2 p.   |