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| HYMENOPTERA, Eumenidae (Vespoidea) (formerly under Apoidea)--      Description & Statistics            Eumeninae (Eumenidae). -- The
  powder wasps construct mud or stick shelters.  These wasps sting many pest insects to
  death, and can store 6-8 caterpillars in each cell.   Eumenidae are solitary insects,
  showing much variety in the location and manner of forming the cell to
  receive prey.  Some build vase-like or
  spherical cells of mud, clay, sand or masticated leaf tissue that are
  fastened to twigs or other objects. 
  Other species utilize tubular cavities in stems and partition off each
  successive cell.  A number of species
  make burrows in the soil, and a few utilize the abandoned cells of other
  wasps  (Clausen 1940/1962).   Most eumenids provision the nest
  with larvae of Lepidoptera, although some also utilize larvae of
  Tenthredinidae and Chrysomelidae.  The
  family is regarded as completely beneficial. 
  Each cell is provided with a number of paralyzed larvae, the egg being
  laid just before the cell is closed. 
  Species of the genus Synagris
  exhibit some departures from the normal behavior of the family.  Female S.
  cornuta L. places the egg in the
  cell as soon as it is completed, and no provisions are brought in until after
  hatching (Roubaud 1910).  Caterpillars
  are never brought to the nest, but the parent female feeds the larva periodically
  with chewed bits of the body contents of freshly killed prey.  Caterpillars are placed in the cell at
  certain intervals by S. sicheliana Sauss, and it is closed
  when the larva is about 3/4ths mature, this behavior of maternal care being
  recorded in several other genera.   Eggs are usually elongated and have
  a stalk at one end which in some species is longer than the egg body and by
  means of which it may be suspended from the cell wall.  The hatched larva may retain its
  attachment to the eggshell for some time after hatching.   Hunting behavior of Odynerus herrichi Sauss. was studied by Spooner (1934), who found that the
  female searches for a tortricid larva, on which it preys, in its web, bites a
  hole in the top and then thrusts its stinger through the web.  Because of this disturbance, the
  caterpillar emerges through the hole and drops to the ground.  Then the wasp drops perpendicularly to the
  ground also, captures the caterpillar and carries it to the nest.  If not found on the first attempt, the
  wasp returns to the plant, finds the hole in the web, and again drops to the
  ground to search for the caterpillar (Clausen 1940/1962).   = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =   References:   Please refer to 
  <biology.ref.htm>, [Additional references may be found
  at: MELVYL
  Library ]     Carpenter, J. M. 
  (1986). "A synonymic generic checklist of the Eumeninae
  (Hymenoptera: Vespidae)" (PDF). Psyche 93:
  61–90.
  http://psyche.entclub.org/pdf/93/93-061.pdf.    Carpenter, J.
  M. & B. R. Garcete-Barrett. 2003. A key to the neotropical genera of
  Eumeninae (Hymenoptera: Vespidae). Boletín del
  Museo Nacional de Historia Natural del Paraguay 14: 52–73.    CSIRO
  Entomology Division. 1991. The Insects of Australia: a textbook for Students
  and Research. 2nd Edition. Melbourne University Press and Cornell University
  Press. 1137 pp.   Giordani
  Soika, 1989. Terzo contributo alla conoscenza degli eumenidi afrotropicali
  (Hymenoptera). Societa Veneziana di Scienze Naturali Lavori 14(1) 1989:
  19–68.    Giordani
  Soika, A. 1992. Di alcuni eumenidi nuovi o poco noti (Hymenoptera Vespoidea).
  Societá Veneziana di Scienze Naturali Lavori 17 1992: 41–68.    Giordani
  Soika, A. 1993. Di alcuni nuovi eumenidi della regione orientale (Hym.
  Vespoidea). Bollettino del Museo Civico di Storia Naturale di Venezia 42, 30
  giugno 1991(1993): 151–163.    Gusenleitner.
  1992. Zwei neue Eumeniden-Gattungen und -Arten aus Madagaskar (Vespoidea,
  Hymenoptera). Linzer Biologische Beiträge 24(1) 1992: 91–96.      |