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  2. Spider wasp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spider_wasp

    Wasps in the family Pompilidae are commonly called spider wasps, ... The pompilid body is typically dark (black or blue, sometimes with metallic reflections), but ...

  3. Heterodontonyx bicolor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heterodontonyx_bicolor

    This wasp is a predator of the huntsman spiders in the genera Heteropoda and Isopeda (family Sparassidae) and wolf spiders in the genus Lycosa . [3] As with other Pompilidae, the female paralyses the spider by stinging it in its underside. The prey is then dragged to a burrow, dug by the female using shovel-like hairs on its front legs.

  4. Anoplius viaticus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anoplius_viaticus

    Anoplius viaticus, commonly known as the black-banded spider wasp, is a species of spider wasp. These wasps are known as spider wasps because the females capture spiders to provide their offspring with food. The paralysed spider is cached in a burrow, the wasp lays an egg on it, and when this hatches, the developing wasp larva consumes the ...

  5. 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.

  6. Episyron rufipes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Episyron_rufipes

    Episyron rufipes, the red-legged spider wasp, is a red and black or completely black spider-hunting wasp. Description. 8–12.5 mm in length. Adults are mainly black ...

  7. 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.

  8. Tachypompilus ignitus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tachypompilus_ignitus

    The rain spider wasp or red-femora spider wasp [3] (Tachypompilus ignitus) is an Afrotropical species of spider wasp specialising in capturing spiders of the genus Palystes, the rain spiders. Distribution

  9. Episyron quinquenotatus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Episyron_quinquenotatus

    Adult females search for orb weaver spiders and paralyse captured prey by stinging the spider on the underside of the cephalothorax.The wasp digs a burrow in loose sandy soil using the combs on its front legs and draws the paralysed spider into it, it then lays an egg on the spider's abdomen which hatches in two or three days, when the grub begins to feed on the soft tissue of the spider. [2]