bugs making mud balls
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bugs making mud balls
I love when mud daubers are building their nests and just go bwehbwehbwehbwehbwehbwehbweh while placing the mud. The sound brings me great joy.
Today's wasp of the day is the common blue mud dauber (Chalybion californicum)!
Also known as the black widow killer, these wasps are spider hunters who like to repurpose abandoned nests from other bees and wasps, because why waste the time and energy to dig a new hole if a perfectly good one is already there?
Enough tumblr snake look at this critter I found
The dauberrrrrrrr
I think I saw a blue mud dauber for the first time a few days ago, and they really are SO blue in person! Really pretty. Could we get some facts about those?
Blue Mud Daubers - SOCAL, USA:
So, after speaking to this friend off line, we know that this species lives SoCal, and the species is likely...
Common Blue Mud Dauber (Chalybion californicum), family Sphecidae, live over much of the US, Mexico, and far southern Canada
In low light this wasp may look blackish, but in full light looks iridescent blue.
Females sting, but males cannot.
They have been introduced into the Caribbean, Hawaii, and parts of Europe.
Females either construct their own mud nests, or refurbish the nests of other mud daubers (even of other species).
Adults feed on nectar.
Females sting and paralyze spiders (mostly black widows). They place the spiders in the mud nest, and lay an egg on them. The larvae feed on the spider after hatching from the egg.
They hunt prey on low vegetation, on the ground, and under rocks and logs.
photograph by Nell Cant & Bob Noble
Chicago, IL, USA - photo by Carol Blaney
photograph by Bug Eric
Now another possibility is this one as well...
Steel Blue Cricket Hunter (Chlorion aerarium), family Sphecidae, found across the US, far northern Mexico, and extreme southern Canada.
Adults feed on nectar.
Not found near homes that often, they tend to frequent open fields.
Females paralyze crickets. They dig burrows into the ground, where the place the cricket. They then lay an egg on the cricket, which the larvae feed on.
photograph by bg1159 & Edward Trammel
this mud dauber wasp (Sceliphron caementarium) seemed distressed about something in her clay nest. Turns out it had been commandeered by a keyhole wasp (Pachodynerus nasidens), who was now aggressively asserting ownership
keyhole wasps, which hunt weevils and other small beetles, will opportunistically nest in any sort of small cavity (such as a keyhole). The existing literature on this species doesn’t say anything about taking over other wasp‘s nests, only that they sometimes refurbish abandoned nests, but I guess this one didn’t get the memo.
This isn't the worst of their mischief though- they also have a habit of building nests that clog up the airspeed measuring instruments in planes and have caused several fatal crashes.
(Florida, 10/6/21)
GUYSSSSS WASP. I'VE BEEN BLESSED BY WASP!!!! WASP VISITING!!!
lazy pastel thing ? bug