Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Tachypompilus unicolor

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Class
  
Insecta

Suborder
  
Apocrita

Phylum
  
Arthropoda

Order
  
Hymenoptera

Family
  
Pompilidae

Tachypompilus unicolor, the red-tailed spider hunter, is a species of spider wasp from western North America.

Contents

Description

Especially in the subspecies T.u. cerinus the body is often entirely red, with yellow, dark margined wings.

Distribution

Southern California, including the northern Baja California and the Channel Islands, north to the Okanagan Valley, southern British Columbia, eastwards through south- western Idaho to western South Dakota and northern Utah.

Biology

Adult T. unicolor feed at honeydew secretions and flowers. Females have been captured at honeydew from galls of Disholcapsis eldoradensis on Quercus lobata and at flowers of Asclepias erosa, Baccharis sarothroides, Chrysothamnus sp., Lepidospartum squamatum and Wislizenia refracta. Males have been taken on the flowers of Calochortus catalinae, Hemizonia fasciculata, Rhamnus californica and Xanthium spinosum. Both males and females visit the extrafloral nectaries of Helianthus and have been collected at flowers of Atriplex semibaccata, Cicuta sp., Eriogonum fasciculatum, Eriogonum gracile and Foeniculum vulgare. The flight period in California is from May to October with a peak in July and August.

Subspecies

  • Tachypompilus unicolor unicolor Banks, distinguished by darker, often violaceous wings and having the mesosoma frequently being partially black, predominantly in the males. The western part of the range.
  • Tachypompilis unicolor cerinus Evans in the eastern part of the species range.
  • References

    Tachypompilus unicolor Wikipedia