Ammophila urnaria
Den här artikeln har skapats av Lsjbot, ett program (en robot) för automatisk redigering. (2013-08) Artikeln kan innehålla fakta- eller språkfel, eller ett märkligt urval av fakta, källor eller bilder. Mallen kan avlägsnas efter en kontroll av innehållet (vidare information) |
Ammophila urnaria | |
![]() | |
Systematik | |
---|---|
Domän | Eukaryoter Eukaryota |
Rike | Djur Animalia |
Stam | Leddjur Arthropoda |
Understam | Sexfotingar Hexapoda |
Klass | Egentliga insekter Insecta |
Ordning | Steklar Hymenoptera |
Överfamilj | Bin Apoidea |
Familj | Grävsteklar Sphecidae |
Släkte | Ammophila |
Art | Ammophila urnaria |
Vetenskapligt namn | |
§ Ammophila urnaria | |
Auktor | Dahlbom, 1843 |
Synonymer | |
Sphex floridensis Fernald, 1934[1] Sphex arvensis Fernald, 1933[1] Ammophila inepta Cresson, 1873[1] | |
Hitta fler artiklar om djur med |
Ammophila urnaria[1] är en biart som beskrevs av Anders Gustav Dahlbom 1843. Ammophila urnaria ingår i släktet Ammophila och familjen grävsteklar.[2][3] Inga underarter finns listade i Catalogue of Life.[2]
Källor
- ^ [a b c d] (2008) , website, Sphecidae sensu lato site, Individual genus PDF files
- ^ [a b] Bisby F.A., Roskov Y.R., Orrell T.M., Nicolson D., Paglinawan L.E., Bailly N., Kirk P.M., Bourgoin T., Baillargeon G., Ouvrard D. (red.) (5 november 2011). ”Species 2000 & ITIS Catalogue of Life: 2011 Annual Checklist.”. Species 2000: Reading, UK. http://www.catalogueoflife.org/annual-checklist/2011/search/all/key/ammophila+urnaria/match/1. Läst 24 september 2012.
- ^ ITIS Bees: World Bee Checklist. Ruggiero M. (project leader), Ascher J. et al., 2009-09-28
Media som används på denna webbplats
Robot icon
Författare/Upphovsman: Internet Archive Book Images, Licens: No restrictions
Identifier: oninstinctshabit00peck Title: On the instincts and habits of the solitary wasps Year: 1898 (1890s) Authors: Peckham, George Williams, 1845-1914 Peckham, Elizabeth (Gifford), 1854- Subjects: Wasps Publisher: Madison, Wis. : Pub. by the state
View Book Page: Book Viewer
About This Book: Catalog Entry
View All Images: All Images From Book
Click here to view book online to see this illustration in context in a browseable online version of this book.
Text Appearing Before Image:
their lives. In our neighborhood we have but two species ofAmmophila, urnaria Cresson (PL II., fig. 2), and gracilis Cres-son, both of them being very slender bodied wasps of about aninch in length, gracilis all black, and irrnaria with a red bandaround the front end of the abdomen. With two exceptionsour observations relate to urnaria. During the earlier part of the summer we had often seenthese wasps feeding upon the nectar of flowers, especially uponthat of the sorrel of which they are particularly fond, but atthat time we gave them but passing notice. One bright morn-ing in the middle of July, however, we came upon one that wasso evidently hunting, and hunting in earnest, that we gave upeverything else to follow her. The ground was covered, moreor less thickly, with patches of purslane, and it was under theseweeds that our Ammophila was eagerly searching for her prey.After thoroughly investigating one plant she would pass toanother, running three or four steps and then bounding ai
Text Appearing After Image: 4f ,Z AMMOPHILA AND HER CATERPILLARS. 7 though she were made of thistledown and were too light to re-main upon the ground. We followed her easily, and as she wasin full view nearly all of the time we had ©very hope of wit-nessing the capture, but in this we were destined to disappoint-ment. We had been in attendance on her for about a quarterof an hour when, after disappearing for a few moments underthe thick purslane leaves, she came out with a green caterpillar.We had missed the wonderful sight of the paralyzer at work,but we had no time to bemoan our loss for she was making offat so rapid a pace that we were well occupied in keeping up withher. She hurried along with the same motion as before, unem-barrassed by the weight o^ her victim. (Plate III.) Twice shedropped it and circled over it a moment before taking it again.For sixty feet she kept to open ground, passing between two rowsof bushes, but at the end of this division of the garden, sheplunged, very much to our dismay, into
Note About Images