Spider Wasp
Generic
common name for wasps that belongs to the family Pompilidae, a genus which
contains some 5,000 species, that are divided in several subfamilies (fig.). As the
common name suggests, most members of this family hunt, capture and paralyze
spiders, often by dismembering them (fig.), which they then drag to their nest, usually a self-constructed burrow
in the sand. The female will then lay a single egg on the abdomen of the spider,
and the burrow is closed off, burying the spider alive and leaving it as living
food for the wasp's larva. To ease access into burrows, spider wasps typically
have a slender body and long, spiny legs. In Thai, spider wasps are known as
toh
maengmoom (ต่อแมงมุม).
Occasionally, also called Spider-hunting Wasp. See also
Ichneumon Wasp (fig.),
Thread-waisted
Wasp (fig.), and Mud Dauber (fig.).
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