Hobbies And Interests

How to Identify a Mud-Dauber

A mud-dauber is a common term used in the western and southern United States to refer to a group of wasps in the family Crabronidae or Sphecidae. It specifically includes the following three species: the organ-pipe mud-dauber (Trypoxylon politum), the black-and-yellow mud-dauber and the iridescent-blue mud-dauber (Chalybion californicum). The following steps will show how to identify a mud-dauber.

Instructions

    • 1

      Observe characteristics common to all mud-daubers. They are long, slender wasps with thread-like waists. Unlike many other types of wasps, they are solitary and use their stings only on prey.

    • 2

      Study the behavior of mud-daubers. They are so named because their nests consist of mud which is molded into place by the female's mandibles. They almost never sting in self-defense, even when thoroughly provoked. They stock the cells with a prey insect that they paralyze with the sting and lay a single egg in each cell. The larvae hatch and feed off of the prey left in the cell. The wasps emerge from the cell in their adult form.

    • 3

      Identify the organ-pipe mud-dauber by a nest that consists of a series of open cylindrical cells resembling a pipe organ. It has a solid black body and a waist that is slightly thicker than the other two species.

    • 4

      Identify the black-and-yellow mud dauber by its black body with yellow limbs. It plasters its cells over to make a smooth nest.

    • 5

      Identify the iridescent-blue mud-dauber by its metallic blue body with blue wings. It does not build a nest at all and uses the abandoned nests of other wasps.


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