[PHOTOS TAKEN: AUGUST 10TH, 2025 | Image IDs: Four photos of a dark, metallic blue common blue mud dauber on a human finger /End IDs.]
Chalybion californicum!
seen from China
seen from China
seen from Malaysia
seen from Malaysia
seen from Maldives

seen from Singapore
seen from United States
seen from Maldives
seen from South Korea
seen from Georgia
seen from T1
seen from China
seen from Maldives

seen from Australia
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Pakistan

seen from Pakistan
seen from China

seen from Canada
[PHOTOS TAKEN: AUGUST 10TH, 2025 | Image IDs: Four photos of a dark, metallic blue common blue mud dauber on a human finger /End IDs.]
Chalybion californicum!
despite the lack of the classic stem-chomping pose associated with sleeping wasps, this Prionyx was clearly not fully awake or at least winding down, and only moved whenever i bothered it too much. my main intention was to show off its face and waist, but you can still see its oversized hind legs that almost resemble the grasshoppers its mom once fed it as a baby
i also got whatever this ridiculous shot is supposed to be so you can appreciate the aforementioned chompers
(August 29th, 2025)
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
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
i'm thinking about bugs
this Mud-dauber Wasp chose our windowsil to build her nest! after a bit of investigation of me and my camera, she graciously allowed me to photograph her while she worked on her construction.
in the photos above, she has arrived with a ball of mud collected from somewhere nearby. this nest isn't for her to live in, but for her young to grow and pupate. in this mass of mud she will craft several individual cells, and provision them all with the paralysed bodies of orb-weaver spiders. each cell will have a single egg laid on the first spider, before being sealed off with more mud.
here, she picks the next spot to deposit her ball of mud, using her mandibles to smooth it onto the structure. when the larvae hatch, they will consume all the spiders in their respective cells, before pupating and then emerging as adults wasps.
each time she finished with a layer of mud, she would take a moment to groom her forelegs and antennae, before flying off to repeat the process. these photos were taken earlier in the Summer, and as of posting this, the adult wasps have yet to emerge.
Covered-cell Mud-dauber Wasp, female (Sceliphron laetum).
Drawing of the day: Megarhyssa greenei. Bonus mini collage of my favourite non-cartoon wasp drawings. I plan on adding more as I go along. For now, this is only a sample. Drawing wasps is keeping me sane during these dark times. Which one is your favourite?
Cicada Killer on my forearm. I was a little nervous, but wikipedia says their stings are quite mild… unless you’re a cicada.