Abstract

Swarm-founding ‘Warrior wasps’ (Synoeca spp.) are found throughout the tropical regions of South America, are much feared due to their aggressive nest defence and painful sting. There are only five species of Synoeca, all construct distinctive nests that consist of a single sessile comb built onto the surface of a tree or rock face, which is covered by a ribbed envelope. Although locally common, research into this group is just starting. We studied eight colonies of Synoeca septentrionalis, a species recently been described from Brazil. A new colony is established by a swarm of 52 to 140 adults that constructs a colony containing around 200 brood cells. The largest colony collected containing 865 adults and over 1400 cells. The number of queen’s present among the eight colonies varied between 3 and 58 and no clear association between colony development and queen number was detected. Workers and queens were morphologically indistinguishably, but differences in their cuticular hydrocarbons were detected, particularly in their (Z)-9-alkenes. The simple cuticular profile, multiple queens, large size and small number of species makes the ‘Warrior wasps’ an excellent model group for further chemical ecology studies of swarm-founding wasps.

Highlights

  • In tropical regions, the independent founding Vespine wasps are replaced by the swarm-founding Polistinae

  • Until recently S. septentrionalis was not recorded from Brazil being found in Central America (Mexico to Panama) and the NW countries of South America (Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador, Peru and Bolivia) [1, 9]

  • This study found S. septentrionalis to be the most common Synoeca species in the study area of Bahia, with only one S. suriname colony found against the nine S. septentrionalis colonies located during this study

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The independent founding Vespine wasps (hornets [Vespa] and yellowjackets [Vespula]) are replaced by the swarm-founding Polistinae. In the Neo-tropics, these swarm-founding wasps have undergone a spectacular radiation. Only 25% of Polistinae species are swarm-founding, they are the most taxonomical diverse, exhibit the greatest diversity of nest structures and range of colony sizes [1, 2]. This makes swarm-founding wasps one of the most highly successful and diverse groups of social insects, but despite this, they remain a poorly studied group. There is often no obvious caste dimorphism between the queens and workers in swarm-founding

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call