Abstract

The aculeate wasps are one of the most diverse and speciose insect taxa; they are omnipresent across ecosystems and exhibit diverse co-evolutionary and exploitative associations with other organisms. There is widespread conjecture that aculeate wasps are likely to perform essential ecological and economic services of importance to the health, well-being and nutritional needs of our planet. However, the scope and nature of the ecosystem services they provide are not well understood relative to other insect groups (e.g. bees, butterflies, beetles); an appreciation of their value is further tarnished by their public reputation as pointless pests. Here, we conduct the first comprehensive review of how aculeate wasps contribute to the four main areas of ecosystem services: regulatory, provisioning, supporting and cultural services. Uniting data from a large but previously disconnected literature on solitary and social aculeate wasps, we provide a synthesis on how these insects perform important ecosystem services as parasites, predators, biological indicators, pollinators, decomposers and seed dispersers; and their additional services as a sustainable alternative to meat for human consumption, and medicinal potential as sources of research leads for anti-microbials and cancer treatments. We highlight how aculeate wasps offer substantial, but largely overlooked, economic benefits through their roles in natural pest management and biological control programs. Accordingly, we provide data-driven arguments for reasons to consider the ecosystem service value of aculeate wasps on a par with other 'useful' insects (e.g. bees). Finally, we provide a research roadmap identifying the key areas of research required to capitalise better on the services provided by these important insects.

Highlights

  • The natural world provides functions and goods – known as ecosystem services (ESs) – that are of value to society by supporting either directly or indirectly the quality of human life (Harrington et al, 2010)

  • A research roadmap for valuing the ecosystem services of aculeate wasps (1) Quantifying the impact of wasps as regulators of arthropod populations (a) In which natural ecological networks are social wasps key predators, and how will these networks be affected by changing populations of wasps? (b) What is the economic value of aculeate wasps as agents of biocontrol in agricultural landscapes? (c) Can life history and taxonomy be used to predict the quality and scope of biocontrol services provided by aculeate wasps? (2) Determining the contributions of aculeate wasps as pollinators in natural and agricultural landscapes (3) Developing social wasps as biological indicators (4) Harnessing the provisioning services of aculeate wasps (5) Documenting drivers of change for wasp populations VII

  • Insects represent one of the largest and most biodiverse groups in the animal kingdom and are renowned for their contributions to all four categories of ESs (Losey & Vaughan, 2006; Noriega et al, 2018); for instance, 88% of angiosperm plants are pollinated by insects (Ollerton, Winfree, & Tarrant, 2011), and the pollination services provided by insects are estimated to be worth over $250billion/year worldwide (IPBES, 2016)

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Summary

Brock et al Wasp ecosystem services

(b) Facultative pollination – where plants are opportunistically pollinated by aculeate wasps III. Cultural services (1) Aculeate wasps as biological indicators (2) Wasps in culture and recreation VI. A research roadmap for valuing the ecosystem services of aculeate wasps (1) Quantifying the impact of wasps as regulators of arthropod populations (a) In which natural ecological networks are social wasps key predators, and how will these networks be affected by changing populations of wasps? (b) What is the economic value of aculeate wasps as agents of biocontrol in agricultural landscapes? (c) Can life history and taxonomy be used to predict the quality and scope of biocontrol services provided by aculeate wasps? (2) Determining the contributions of aculeate wasps as pollinators in natural and agricultural landscapes (3) Developing social wasps as biological indicators (4) Harnessing the provisioning services of aculeate wasps (5) Documenting drivers of change for wasp populations VII.

INTRODUCTION
Example service
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Social Social Solitary
Findings
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