Nebraskaland

July 2022 Nebraskaland Magazine

NEBRASKAland Magazine is dedicated to outstanding photography and informative writing with an engaging mix of articles and photos highlighting Nebraska’s outdoor activities, parklands, wildlife, history and people.

Issue link: http://mag.outdoornebraska.gov/i/1472069

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30 Nebraskaland • July 2022 into adults. As mentioned earlier, parasitoids don't need nests because they are laying eggs right on their hosts. That saves a lot of time, but doesn't do much to protect their larvae, which are feeding inside an immobile insect or spider that's lying out in the open. There's a pretty good chance a predator or scavenger will come pick up that helpless creature and eat both it and the parasitoid larva within. You may have noticed that I'm using a lot of words like "often," "generally" and "most" as I describe wasps and their life histories. That's because when you're talking about more than 100,000 species, there are exceptions to pretty much every rule. Cuckoo wasps, for example, are pretty exceptional. These wasps don't make their own nests or hunt their own prey. Instead, they lay their eggs in the nests of other wasps or on another wasp's prey when it is left unattended, sometimes while the wasp is building a nest to put it in. Also known as Female noble scoliid wasps (Scolia nobilitata) feed their young with scarab beetle larvae by digging into the ground and laying eggs on them. Males spend their lives searching for females to mate with. Both feed on nectar from many diff erent fl owers. The great black wasp (Sphex pensylvanicus) caches several paralyzed katydids in an underground nest and lays an egg on each one. Birds sometimes harass these wasps and steal their prey before they can get them to the nest. Yellow-legged mud-daubers (Sceliphron caementarium) build above ground tubular nests out of mud and fi ll them with paralyzed spiders for their larvae to feed on. Their tubes are often found on the sides of buildings. The top photo shows a mud-dauber nest after the larva has exited. The bottom photo shows the remains of a paralyzed spider and discarded skins the wasp larva left after it grew and molted.

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