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HYMENOPTERA, Vespidae (Stephens) -
(Vespoidea) -- <Images>
& <Juveniles> Please refer also
to the following links for further details: Vespidae = Link 1 Description & Statistics
Vespidae. -- 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.
Papermaking wasps are included in this family, which often live in
large colonies consisting of a queen, males and workers. Generally they feed the brood with
masticated portions of animal matter and at times with fruit juices, nectar
and honeydew. Animal food consists
principally of the body contents of caterpillars and other soft bodied
insects. The family is considered
important in the natural control of injurious insects, particularly the
exposed foliage feeders.
The "Spanish Jack," a species of Polistes, is accredited for markedly reducing the population of
several pests in certain islands of the West Indies and has been
intentionally colonized on several islands.
Bartlett (1938) mentioned that several species of Vespidae, the most
numerous of which is P. crinitus var. americanus F., are largely responsible for holding Laphygma frugiperda S. & A. in control in Puerto Rico. R. B. Friend observed the females of P. pallipes Lep. cutting open the leaf
mines of the birch leaf miner, Fenusa
pumila Klug., and feeding on the larvae
(Clausen 1940/1962). Not all Polistes are beneficial because the
food range is sufficiently wide to include various insects that are
beneficial. An instance is the
extensive attack of P. orientalis F. on honeybees in Egypt
(Clausen 1940/1962). Stenogaster
spp. in the Philippines feed their young with a milky-white jelly made from
the chewed-up bodies of tiny midges taken from spider webs (Williams
1923). Wheeler & Taylor (1921)
found Vespa arctica Roh. to be a permanent social parasite in the nest of V. diabolica
Sauss., where her brood is reared by the workers.
Vespidae is a moderately sized family that is widespread but
especially numerous in temperate climates.
Important morphological characters include the long slender antennae,
curved but not curled (as in Pompilidae).
The pronotum extends laterally to the tegulae; wings with usually long
discoidal (M-4) cell. They are medium
sized (9-25 mm), dark, but marked with yellow, white or red. Wings are usually folded longitudinally
when the insect is at rest.
The adults are predaceous on any exposed insect larvae. In social species, the macerated body
contents are carried back to their nests, constructed of paper, mud or sand,
to serve as food for developing broods.
Other species are solitary, constructing nests of various types, and
usually provisioning them with lepidopterous larvae. The subfamily Masarinae stores pollen and
nectar in their nests. Few vespids
have been manipulated to enhance their effectiveness as predators, their main
value being in natural occurring biological control.
Six subfamilies are Eumeninae, Euparagiinae, Masarinae, Polistinae,
Stenogastrinae & Vespinae, several of which are treated as separate
families by some authorities (ie., Masaridae, Eumenidae and Vespidae) (
Brothers & Finnamore 1993). They
reported that all of these were cosmopolitan but mainly tropical. They also noted that adults are
predominantly black or brown but are often marked with yellow or white. Most species are solitary, but many are
social. In solitary species the larva
is usually predatory on other insects, especially caterpillars, in a cell
constructed and provisioned by the adult female. The larva is sometimes given a mixture of pollen and nectar
instead. In social species adult
females feed on masticated insects or rarely on glandular secretions. A few are cleptoparasitic in the nests of
social insects. Pupation is within
the cell. Brothers & Finnamore
(1993) noted. 315 species in 31 genera in North America. = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = References:
Please refer to <biology.ref.htm>,
[Additional references may be found
at: MELVYL Library ] Naumann, M.
G. 1968. Univ.
Kansas Sci. Bull. 48: 929-1003. Carpenter, J.M. & J.M. Cumming. 1985. A
character analysis of the North American potter wasps (Hymenoptera:
Vespidae; Eumeninae). Journal of
Natural History 19: 877-916. Cowan, D.P. 1991. The solitary and presocial
Vespidae. pp. 33-73 In K.G. Ross &;R.W. Matthews, eds. The Social
Biology of Wasps. Cornell Univ. Press. Duncan,
C. 1939. Stanford Univ. Publ., Univ. Ser. Biol. Sci. 8:
1-272. Eberhard, M.
J. W. 1969. Univ. Mich. Mus. Zool. Misc. Publ. 140: 1-101. Hunt, J. H.,
I. Baker, & H. G. Baker. 1982. Similarity of amino acids in nectar and
larval saliva: the nutritional basis for trophallaxis in social wasps.
Evolution 36: 1318-1322 Pickett, K. M. & J. M. Carpenter. 2010.
Simultaneous analysis and the origins of sociality in the Vespidae
(Insecta: Hymenoptera). Arthropod
Systematics & Phylogeny 68(1):
3-33. |