Potter-wasp

A day at home, alternating spells at the computer with some major dead-heading in the garden. It was mostly warm and sunny, and I found it easy to get distracted by the many species of bee, wasp and hoverfly visiting the flowers. one of the most striking was this potter-wasp Symmorphus gracilis.

Species of Symmorphus are tube-nesters, using existing cavities such as plant stems, e.g. bramble and elder; vacated burrows of wood-boring insects; straws of thatched roofs; old walls; and even vertical sand banks. When a suitable nesting site has been found, the female clears away any remaining pith and debris. Next she collects clay which is softened with water stored in her crop. Often, a preliminary plug of clay is placed at the end of the burrow before the cells are built. The clay partitions between the cells have a rough, convex inner surface and a smooth, concave outer surface, which probably helps the full-grown larva to orientate itself for its eventual escape as an adult from the cell (as in most, if not all, aculeates with a similar life cycle). The cells are arranged linearly. An egg is laid in each cell before the cell is provisioned.
This species is probably preying on the larvae of Cionus weevils, which are abundant on our Water Figwort. The prey is immobilised by stinging and carried by the mandibles and forelegs. Prey are packed tightly in the cell, avoiding the egg. Usually, the egg takes two or three days to hatch, with the larval stage taking one to two weeks with probably five instars. When feeding is completed the larva may rest for about a day and voids its gut contents at the inner end of the cell before spinning a cocoon which is anchored at the base of the cell. When the species is univoltine, the prepupal stage lasts for six to eight months, the pupal stage for one week and the newly emerged adult rests in the cell for two to three weeks before emerging. When the species is multivoltine, the prepupal stage lasts about one week.

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