enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Spider wasp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spider_wasp

    The female wasp may then engage in spreading soil or other changes to the area, leaving the nest site inconspicuous. One species of spider wasp protects its nests by putting dead ants into the outermost chamber, where the ants' chemicals deter predators. [16] [17] Wasp dragging a spider to its nest

  3. Tarantula hawk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tarantula_hawk

    A tarantula hawk is a spider wasp (Pompilidae) that preys on tarantulas.Tarantula hawks belong to any of the many species in the genera Pepsis and Hemipepsis. They are one of the largest parasitoid wasps, using their sting to paralyze their prey before dragging it into a brood nest as living food; a single egg is laid on the prey, hatching to a larva which eats the still-living host.

  4. Entypus unifasciatus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entypus_unifasciatus

    Female wasps paralyze large spiders and deposit them in burrows. The wasp lays a fertilized egg upon the spider; after hatching, the larva feeds on the living but paralyzed spider until maturing into a pupa that overwinters, and emerges as a winged adult next summer.

  5. Priocnemis monachus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Priocnemis_monachus

    Priocnemis monachus is a species of spider wasp endemic to New Zealand, where it is known as the black hunting wasp or ngaro wīwī. It hunts large tunnelweb or trapdoor spiders, paralysing them with its sting and storing them in burrows for its larvae to eat alive.

  6. Auplopus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auplopus

    Auplopus is a large genus of spider wasps belonging to the subfamily Pepsinae of the spider wasp family Pompilidae, distributed throughout the world except for Antarctica. Auplopus wasps amputate the legs of their spider prey before transporting it to the nest.

  7. Entypus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entypus

    Entypus is a genus of spider wasps in the family Pompilidae. There are at least 40 described species in Entypus. [2] [3] Species.

  8. Argiope (spider) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Argiope_(spider)

    Argiope bruennichi is commonly known as the wasp spider. In Australia , Argiope keyserlingi and Argiope aetherea are known as St Andrew's cross spiders , for their habit of resting in the web with paired legs outstretched in the shape of an X and mirroring the large white web decoration (the cross of St. Andrew [ 2 ] having the same form).

  9. Pompilus cinereus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pompilus_cinereus

    Pompilus cinereus, the leaden spider wasp is the most widespread species of the Pompilus spider wasps, and throughout a large proportion of its wide distribution is the only species of Pompilus. [1] It is the type species of the genus Pompilus and therefore of the family Pompilidae .