Wednesday, January 28, 2015

Sand Wasps, Genus Bembix

Solitary wasps are among the most easily observed of insects, and their behaviors and life histories are intensely captivating. Sand wasps in the genus Bembix are familiar and common throughout North America, digging their burrows in dunes, on beaches, and other habitats with loose, deep sand.

Bembix female, New Jersey

I had the good fortune of witnessing an industrious female sand wasp excavating her nest at Lathrop State Park in Huerfano County, Colorado last August 4, 2014. Insect activity was minimal in the late afternoon as the wind was picking up a bit and a thunderstorm was quickly approaching. While my wife was looking for a geocache, I studied the nearby vicinity and noticed a hole in the sand. Before I could complete the thought of "Hm-m-m, I wonder what dug that?," a sand wasp backed out of the cavity.

Bembix female, Lathrop State Park, Colorado

The industriousness of a Bembix female is something to behold, as you can see in the video below. She rapidly kicks out large quantities of sand using a "tarsal rake" of spines on each front leg.

There are twenty-one species of Bembix in North America north of Mexico, so generalizations about their behavior are risky. Still, the burrows are oblique, nearly horizontal in many cases, ranging from 19-57 centimeters in length, and a depth of 5-28 centimeters. The tunnels may curve, and usually end in a terminal cell. Several species also dig short, dead-end burrows or furrows in the immediate vicinity, probably to confuse parasites. The entrance of the real, finished burrow is thoroughly concealed.

The burrow is excavated before the wasp goes hunting. True flies in the order Diptera, exclusive of the suborder Nematocera, are used as prey. Bembix are generalist, opportunistic hunters. A victim is paralyzed or killed by the wasp's sting, and is then flown back to the nest. She uses subtle landmarks to unerringly find the buried entrance. Meanwhile, we can't remember where we parked our car. Most of our common Bembix species will lay an egg on this first victim, but some species lay an egg in the empty cell before commencing the hunt.

Once the egg hatches, the mother wasp brings flies to her larva as needed. This is called "progressive provisioning" and is more typical of parental care in birds or mammals than in insects. When the larva reaches maturity, the female wasp closes the cell. Inside, the larva spins an oblong cocoon, weaving sand grains into the structure and resulting in a hardened capsule. Overwintering takes place as a prepupa inside this cocoon, but there are usually two generations annually.

The mother sand wasp may fill in her burrow once her single larva reaches maturity, or she may construct one or two additional cells, each at the end of a short tunnel branching from the main burrow.

Bembix male, southern California

Male sand wasps are often seen alighting on the ground amid the numerous burrows of females, but they also participate in elaborate flight rituals called "sun dances." Males emerge before females, and fly at erratically at dizzying speed one or two inches above the ground attempting to detect virgin females about to erupt from their underground chambers.

Females join the males in flight if they are not pounced on immediately, and a pair that unites in mid-air will make a bee-line out of the mob and finish mating elsewhere before re-joining the masses. Should a pair tumble to the earth, great numbers of males will try and usurp the initial suitor.

Bembix female on saltcedar flowers, Colorado

Both sexes fuel their frenetic lifestyle with flower nectar, especially from composites (flowers in the aster family). Some of their mouthparts are fused into a tongue-like proboscis they use to probe for nectar. Sand wasps do nothing slowly it would appear, and one barely gets a glimpse of them, even at a flower, before the wasp is off to another destination.

Bembix wasps are plagued by the usual suspects that parasitize wasp nests: Cuckoo wasps (Chrysididae), velvet ants (wasps in the family Mutillidae), satellite flies (Sarcophagidae), and bee flies (Bombyliidae) being the chief villains in the sand wasp world. Additionally, the adult wasps can be victimized by parasitic thick-headed flies (Conopidae), or killed outright by robber flies (Asilidae).

Watching a nesting aggregation of sand wasps is never a disappointment, and at the very least you will find joy in each and every pesky fly they dispatch in providing for their larval offspring.

Bembix in Colorado

Sources: Bohart, R.M. and A.S. Menke. 1976. Sphecid Wasps of the World. Berkeley: University of California Press. 695 pp.
Evans, Howard E. 1966. The Comparative Ethology and Evolution of the Sand Wasps. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. 326 pp.
Rau, Phil and Nellie. 1918. Wasp Studies Afield. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. 372 pp. (Dover edition, 1970).

13 comments:

  1. This looks a LOT like what the Cicada Killer wasps do in my backyard in Oklahoma. The is NEAT footage of the wasp in action!

    ReplyDelete
  2. I was stung on my toe by a sand bee (possibly Bembix) while walking on the beach in Laguna Beach, CA a few days ago. I squeezed out most of the stinger. Do you think I need to be concerned about the venom?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Susan, sand wasps don't leave their stinger behind anyway....but I suspect something else bit or stung you, especially given the time of year. Get well soon, but please see a physician if symptoms worsen or seem out of proportion to the event.

      Delete
  3. Thank you for this post. Just observed my first Bembix digging. Fascinating!

    ReplyDelete
  4. I am pretty sure I was bitten by a sand wasp a couple days ago. Found a bug I didn't know on my foot and it had just bitten me. Crazy itching!! Any danger?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Sand wasps can *sting*, but they are not dangerously venomous to the average, healthy human. I'm not even sure how people manage to get stung by them. They are so fast they can usually escape our clutches.

      Delete
  5. These little guys were all over the sand playground at my elementary school in Southern California, played with them through grades 1-3 and never got bit/stung once. We called them sand bees as kids and they were always blue in color.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I wonder if we went to the same school lol. I had them at my So Cal elementary school

      Delete
  6. Hey Eric my wife is allergic. And the nests are next door at Grqndmas house. What should we do?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. They should finish nesting in the next couple of weeks, I would think. They are quick to fly away, so even walking among them is not likely to result in a sting. Just wear footwear.

      Delete
    2. Hi Eric, interesting blog!
      Here is a video I have filmed today https://youtu.be/oO-wuxosH2I
      What are they doing? Trying to mate?
      Thames you!

      Delete

Blog author currently unable to reply to reader comments, nor comment himself. Working to resolve this.