Deuteragenia ossarium explained

Deuteragenia ossarium, the bone-house wasp, is a species of pompilid wasp discovered in southeast China in 2014. It was named after graveyard bone-houses or ossuaries, from its characteristic use of a vestibular cell filled with dead ants which is built by the female wasp to close the nest after she lays her eggs.[1] [2]

This technique is theorized to make the species' nests less vulnerable to predatory enemies than nests of other sympatric trap-nesting wasps, possibly by utilizing chemical cues in odors from the dead ants to camouflage the nest from predators, or repel them.[1]

The ant most frequently found in the vestibular cell was Pachycondyla astuta, an aggressive species with a potent sting.[2] D. ossarium parasitism rates were significantly lower than other cavity-nesting wasp species.[1]

In 2015, the International Institute for Species Exploration names it as "Top 10 New Species" for new species discovered in 2014.[3] [4]

Notes and References

  1. Staab. Michael. Ohl. Michael. Zhu. Chao-Dong. Klein. Alexandra-Maria. Nascimento. Fabio S.. A Unique Nest-Protection Strategy in a New Species of Spider Wasp. PLOS ONE. 2014. 9. 7. e101592. 10.1371/journal.pone.0101592. 24987876. 4079592. 2014PLoSO...9j1592S. free.
  2. Megan Gannon, News Editor, LiveScience: Newfound Wasp Literally Has Skeletons in Its Closet, https://news.yahoo.com/newfound-wasp-literally-skeletons-closet-190118261.html, July 2, 2014.
  3. Web site: The ESF Top 10 New Species for 2015. State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry. 13 November 2015. 18 August 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210818164331/https://www.esf.edu/top10/. dead.
  4. News: Berenson. Tessa. These Are the Top 10 New Species Discovered Last Year. 13 November 2015. Time. 21 May 2015.