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HYMENOPTERA


Ants / Wasps / Bees / Sawflies / Horntails

The name Hymenoptera is derived from the Greek words "hymen" meaning membrane and "ptera" meaning wings.   It is also a reference to Hymeno, the Greek god of marriage.   The name is appropriate not only for the membranous nature of the wings, but also for the manner in which they are "joined together as one" by the hamuli.


Classification

Life History & Ecology

Distribution

Physical Features

Economic Importance

Major Families

Fact File

Hot Links






Life History & Ecology:

As a rule, members of the order Hymenoptera can be regarded as ecological specialists.   Most species are rather narrowly adapted to specific habitats and/or specific hosts.   Their remarkable success as a taxon probably has more to do with their immense range of behavioral adaptation rather than any physical or biochemical characteristic.   The Hymenoptera is the only order besides the Isoptera (termites) to have evolved complex social systems with division of labor.

Herbivory is common among the primitive Hymenoptera (suborder Symphyta), in the gall wasps (Cynipidae), and in some of the ants and bees.   Most other Hymenoptera are predatory or parasitic.   The large hunting wasps are agile predators that catch and paralyze insects (or spiders) as food for their offspring.   The greatest diversity, though, is found among the many families of parasitoid wasps whose larvae feed internally on the living tissues of other arthropods (or their eggs).   These insects eventually kill their host, but not before completing their own larval development within its body. Despite their small size and characteristically narrow host range, these wasps are highly abundant and exert a tremendous impact on the population dynamics of many other insect species.

Most of the Hymenoptera have relatively unspecialized mandibulate mouthparts.   An exception is found in the bees (superfamily Apidoidae) where the maxillae and labium are modified into a proboscis that works like a tongue to collect nectar from flowers.   In these insects, the mandibles are used to gather or manipulate pollen and wax.

Except for worker ants, most adult Hymeoptera have two pairs of wings.   Front and hind wings are linked together by hooks (hamuli) along the leading edge of the hind wings that catch in a fold near the back of the front wings.   In flight, both wings operate in unison to form a single aerodynamic surface.






Distribution:

Common worldwide.   Third largest order of insects.
North America
Worldwide
Number of Families 70 90
Number of Species 17,777 103,000





Classification:

Holometabola
complete development (egg, larva, pupa, adult)

The Hymenoptera is divided into two suborders:
  • Symphyta (sawflies and horntails) have a broad junction between thorax and abdomen
  • Apocrita (ants, bees, and wasps) have a narrow junction between the thorax and abdomen.





Physical Features:

immatures
adults
ImmaturesAdults
  1. Sawflies:   Eruciform (caterpillar-like); well developed head capsule; chewing mouthparts; fleshy abdominal prolegs

  2. Bees and wasps:   Grub-like; well developed head; chewing mouthparts; legless and eyeless

  3. Parasitic wasps:   Body form highly reduced; lacking head, eyes or appendages
  1. Chewing mouthparts - except in bees where maxillae and labium form a proboscis for collecting nectar.
  2. Compound eyes well developed.
  3. Tarsi usually 5-segmented.
  4. Triangular stigma in front wings.
  5. Hind wings smaller than front wings, linked together by small hooks (hamuli).
  6. Narrow junction (wasp waist) between thorax and abdomen - except in sawflies and horntails.





Economic Importance:

Although some species are regarded as pests (e.g., sawflies, gall wasps, and some ants), most members of the Hymenoptera are extremely beneficial -- either as natural enemies of insect pests (parasitic wasps) or as pollinators of flowering plants (bees and wasps).





Major Families:

Sawflies:   Larvae feed on foliage or burrow into plant tissues.
  • Diprionidae -- Conifer sawflies
  • Tenthredinidae -- Common sawflies
  • Cephidae -- Stem sawflies

Horntails:   Larvae are wood borers.
  • Siricidae

Parasitic Wasps:   Larvae are parasitoids of other insects.
  • Ichneumonidae -- largest family of the Hymenoptera; parasitoids of other holometabolous insects (or spiders)
  • Braconidae -- mostly parasitoids of lepidopterous larvae
  • Encyrtidae -- mostly parasitoids of aphids and scale insects
  • Eulophidae -- parasitoids of beetles, moths, and other insects
  • Trichogrammatidae -- egg parasites

Gall Wasps:   Larvae are herbivores.   They induce the formation of plant galls and live in or on these tissues.
  • Cynipidae -- most species live on oak trees

Predatory Wasps:   Adults provision nest sites with prey that they catch and paralyze by stinging.
  • Sphecidae (digger wasps) -- prey on caterpillars and spiders
  • Pompiliidae (spider wasps) -- prey on spiders
  • Tiphiidae (tiphiid wasps) -- prey on beetle larvae
  • Scoliidae (scoliid wasps) -- prey on beetle larvae
  • Vespidae (potter wasps) -- prey on caterpillars

Social Wasps:   True social insects.   Paper-like nests are tended by sterile female workers.
  • Vespidae -- yellowjackets, hornets, paper wasps

Ants:   True social insects.   Wingless workers (sterile females) forage for provisions (vegetation, seeds, or other insects)
  • Formicidae --- Ants

Solitary Bees:   Adults construct individual nests and provision them with plant materials (usually nectar or pollen).
  • Halictidae -- sweat bees
  • Megachilidae -- leafcutting bees
  • Anthophoridae -- carpenter bees

Social Bees:   True social insects.   Communal nests are built in the soil (bumble bees) or in cavities (honey bees).   Workers (sterile females) forage for nectar and pollen.
  • Apidae -- bumble bees and honey bees





Fact File:






Hot links and Illustrations:





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Last Updated:   8 March 2005
Copyright 2005
John R. Meyer
Department of Entomology
NC State University