Tachytes
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Tachytes etruscus | |
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Genus: | Tachytes Panzer, 1806
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Tachytes is a genus of predatory, solitary wasps, containing about 300 species.[1]
Selected species
- Tachytes aestuans Turner, 1916
- Tachytes ambidens Kohl, 1884
- Tachytes approximatus Turner, 1908
- Tachytes argenteus Gussakovskij, 1933
- Tachytes argyreus (F. Smith, 1856)
- Tachytes codonocarpi Pulawski, 1975
- Tachytes dispersus Turner, 1916
- Tachytes etruscus (Rossi, 1790)
- Tachytes fatalis Turner, 1916
- Tachytes formosissimus Turner, 1908
- Tachytes freygessneri Kohl, 1881
- Tachytes matronalis Dahlbom, 1845
- Tachytes mitis Turner, 1916
- Tachytes obsoletus (Rossi, 1792)
- Tachytes panzeri (Dufour, 1841)
- Tachytes plutocraticus Turner, 1910
- Tachytes procerus A. Costa, 1882
- Tachytes relucens Turner, 1916
- Tachytes rubellus Turner, 1908
- Tachytes sulcatus Turner, 1916
Etymology
The name of the genus derives from the Greek tachytes, meaning swiftness.[2]
Distribution
These wasps have a worldwide distribution throughout temperate and tropical regions.[3]
Description
Adults are typically black, with light or clear wings, and sometimes a red or brown gaster or legs. They are about 12 mm long, but can range from 4 mm to 24 mm. Many species have green eyes, which is distinctive of the genus. They often possess short golden hairs and a round build, which can give them a bee-like appearance.[3]
Biology
Tachytes generally predates on Orthoptera (grasshoppers and katydids, especially those of the families Acrididae, Tettigoniidae, Tetrigidae, and Tridactylidae), though Tachytes bidens reportedly predates on geometer moths.[3] Like other hunting wasps, the female captures a prey item, stings to paralyze it, and seals it in a burrow along with an egg that consumes the prey during development. The sting often paralyzes the prey completely, though in a few species, it only appears to prevent them from attempting to escape.[4] Their burrows can be very long, up to one meter in Tachytes praedator.[3] Jean-Henri Fabre devotes a chapter to their predacious behavior in his More Hunting Wasps, comparing it with the genus Sphex.[5]
Some Tachytes species exhibit hilltopping behavior, in which males will perch near and territorially defend points of high elevation, such as the tops of hills and mountains. In other cases, males apparently guard burrows with developing females, waiting for them to emerge.[6]
References
- ^ Pulawski, Wojciech. "Catalog of Sphecidae sensu lato". California Academy of Sciences. Retrieved 18 July 2016.
- ^ Craig, John (1849). A New Universal Etymological, Technological, and Pronouncing Dictionary of the English Language. Vol. 2. London: Henry George Collins. p. 833.
- ^ a b c d Bohart, Richard Mitchell; Menke, Arnold S. (1976). Sphecid Wasps of the World: A Generic Revision. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-02318-5.
- ^ Piek, Tom (2013). Venoms of the Hymenoptera: Biochemical, Pharmacological and Behavioural Aspects. Elsevier. ISBN 978-1-4832-6370-0.
- ^ Fabre, Jean-Henri (1921). "Chapter VI. The Tachytes". More Hunting Wasps. Translated by Teixeira de Mattos, Alexander. New York: Dodd, Mead and Company.
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: External link in
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suggested) (help) - ^ Alcock, John (2007). "Hilltopping Behavior by Three Species of Tachytes Wasps (Hymenoptera: Crabronidae)". Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society. 80 (4): 361–368. doi:10.2317/0022-8567(2007)80[361:HBBTSO]2.0.CO;2.