Tarantula hawk

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Tarantula Hawk
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hymenoptera
Suborder: Apocrita
Superfamily: Vespoidea
Family: Pompilidae
Subfamily: Pepsinae
Tribe: Pepsini
Genera

Pepsis
Hemipepsis

The Tarantula Hawk is a type of spider wasp which hunts tarantulas as food for its larvae. The Tarantula Hawk is any type of spider wasp which is in the genera Pepsis and Hemipepsis in the family Pompilidae (spider wasps).

Contents

Description [change]

Most species of Tarantula Hawks are around 5 cm (2 inches) long, making it the largest type of wasp. They usually have a blue-black body and reddish-orange wings, but some have black wings. The color on their wings tells predators that they are dangerous. They have long legs which have hooked claws that are used for grabbing their prey. The stinger of a female Tarantula Hawk can be as long as 7 mm long; the stinger is said to be the most painful insect stinger in the world.

Behavior [change]

When a female Tarantula Hawk finds a tarantula it captures the tarantula and then stings the tarantula. The sting makes the tarantula paralyze. Once the tarantula is paralyzed the Tarantula Hawk drags the tarantula to her burrow or takes it to a specially made nest, where it lays a single egg on the tarantula's abdomen. Once the egg hatches the wasp larva makes a hole in the tarantula's abdomen. It then crawls into the tarantula and feeds on the insides. After a few weeks the larva pupates. After a while the wasp turns into an adult and comes out of the tarantula's abdomen. Tarantula Hawks are also nectarivores, meaning they eat the nectar of flowers. Unlike the females, male Tarantula Hawks do not hunt for tarantulas. Instead they feed on the nectar of flowers of milkweeds, western soapberry trees, or mesquite trees (which the females also feed on).

Where they live [change]

Tarantula Hawks are found in India, southeast Asia, Africa, Australia and the Americas. In the Americas they can be found as far north as Salt Lake City, Utah in the U.S.A to as far south as Argentina in South America. 250 species are found in South America, while many other species have been found in deserts of southwestern U.S.A.

Stinger [change]

The sting of the Tarantula Hawk is said to be the most painful insect sting in the world, but the pain only lasts for 3 minutes. Not many people have been stung by a Tarantula Hawk but people who have say that it is so painful that they can not think of doing anything but scream. Since of their large stinger not many animals eat Tarantula Hawks, but one animal that can is the roadrunner. Many animals avoid Tarantula Hawks because of their sting, so some insects mimic the looks of the Tarantula Hawk. Many types of wasps and bees mimic the looks of the Tarantula Hawk, some types of flies, moths and beetles also mimic the looks of Tarantula Hawks.