You would not believe your eyes
If ten million wasps arise
Out of their galls on the oak tree leaves
seen from Canada
seen from Russia
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from Canada
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Finland

seen from United States
seen from United States
You would not believe your eyes
If ten million wasps arise
Out of their galls on the oak tree leaves
Euderus set, or the "crypt keeper wasp" is a small Eulophid parasitoid of the gall wasp Bassettia pallida.
The female Euderus set will search for the galls or "crypts" induced by the gall wasp Bassettia pallida, but possibly also Andricus quercuspetiolicola and others. The female E. set will then oviposit in the chamber of the gall. When the E. set larva hatches, it will burrow into the host wasp. It then manipulates the host to speed up its development, metamorphoses into an adult, and chews its way up to the surface months earlier than normal. When the host wasp does this, the burrow isn't wide enough for it to emerge from the stem, and its head becomes stuck. The parasitoid then consumes the host and chews through the host's head to emerge as an adult. The larva of E. set overwinters in the gall, eating the host, and emerges the following spring. The mechanism used to manipulate the host is unknown.
This female apparently got overly enthusiastic and took things one step further by wearing her host's head as a costume. Happy Halloween!
📍 Location: Durham, North Carolina 🗓 Date: May 8, 2026 🐾 Media: Image 🌿 Species: Spiny Rose Gall Wasp (Diplolepis bicolor) 📝 Notes: Small cynipid wasp associated with wild roses, best known for inducing distinctive spherical galls covered in pointed spines on stems or leaves. The visible gall is plant tissue growth triggered by the developing larva inside.
Adults are tiny and rarely noticed; the gall itself is usually the most recognizable sign of the species. Galls may shift in color from green to red or brown as they mature.
🔗 iNaturalist: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/359560521
Gall made by a Horned Oak Gall Wasp (Callirhytis cornigera) (by me)
2025 WAUCE BLAST
As the year comes to a close I wish to inundate you all with some of the coolest, prettiest or strangest wasp photos uploaded to iNat this year, inspired by @cathartidae's wauce blasts
Gonatopus and liopterid
Gasteruption and Cameronella
Eumenine and Smicromorpha doddi
Ammophila wrightii and Stilbula
Pelecinus polyturator and Chrysis viridula
Tracheliodes curvitarsis and Oxyscelio
Orasema and Apoica pallens
Scelionids and Feron kingi
Neotriadomerus and Phlebopenes
Euplectromorpha variegata and chalcids
Antron douglasii and Stylaclista
Synergus and Obenbergerella
Elasmosoma and Polistes dominula
Odontophotopsis melicausa and Stizus texanus
Stypiura and Radumeris tasmaniensis
Part 2
Despite it all I persist. Here's a wasp from today
Probably Torymus but don't take my word for it. She was poking around a silk button gall (Neuroterus numismalis) but it seemed like she didn't end up ovipositing? But maybe it's more subtle than I was expecting
Found my first ram's horn gall (Andricus aries) today and saw this cute little gall wasp who ended up crawling onto my hand despite me not being an oak tree
And a few other oak galls
In order, oak artichoke (Andricus foecundatrix), unsure, oak marble (A. kollari) and probably a cola nut gall (A. lignicola), more cola nuts and another one I'm not really sure about, as well as more artichokes
Waups is shapes
A contribution to the wasp doodles in the waspaganda community