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Now that we have a bee keeping section, can we please get a wasp keeping section?
Started By
Manitobant
, May 4 2019 4:41 PM
18 replies to this topic
#1
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Posted May 4 2019 - 4:41 PM
I think it would be a lot easier for new wasp keepers such as myself to have all the wasp stuff put into either it’s own section completely or just add wasps to the bee keeping section in order to find journals and information about wasp keeping. Thanks!
My journals:
Polyergus Mexicanus: https://www.formicul...gs/#entry175528
Lasius minutus: https://www.formicul...cs/#entry174811
Lasius latipes: https://www.formicul...gs/#entry206449
General acanthomyops journal: https://www.formicul...yops-with-eggs/
Polyergus Mexicanus: https://www.formicul...gs/#entry175528
Lasius minutus: https://www.formicul...cs/#entry174811
Lasius latipes: https://www.formicul...gs/#entry206449
General acanthomyops journal: https://www.formicul...yops-with-eggs/
#2
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Posted May 5 2019 - 11:57 AM
You may want to see how many people still keep wasps. I used to, but stopped.
also, put this in the improvements section.
#3
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Posted May 5 2019 - 5:20 PM
Ill think about adding a wasp section... but it’s gonna be a no for me dawg
#4
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Posted May 6 2019 - 3:42 PM
We already have one, after all ants are just bloody funny wasps.
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#5
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Posted May 6 2019 - 3:43 PM
We already have one, after all ants are just bloody funny wasps.
True actually.
My Main Journal | My Neivamyrmex Journal | My Ant Adoption | My YouTube
Join the TennesseeAnts Discord Server! https://discord.gg/JbKwPgs
#6
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Posted May 8 2019 - 9:20 PM
I used to keep them years ago as well. I convinced my roommates it was for a college research project, otherwise they wouldn't have let me done it. I stopped for a while.
They have such a huge protein demand and are extremely messy once you get around 10 or so wasps. Feeding was always a hassle, but wasps are a lot smarter than we give them credit for.
The wasps will eventually learn that every time you walk by or open the enclosure, there will be food. One of the biggest downsides for me was that it was always awkward when you're expecting guests. I ended up having to always hide them in the closet when I expected company.
Here are a few photos from 2012. At first the queen doesn't eat much and purposefully feeds her larvae very little in order to prevent a large worker from being born and taking her place.
At the time I was growing a pretty hefty amount of silkworms because of a mulberry tree that happened to be growing near our house. They surprisingly ate all of them and I had to order more.
They went 1 day without any protein source and they started cutting open pupae cells just to feed their own larvae. 1 DAY!
They aren't as scary as they are in the wild. They will eventually learn that you aren't gonna do them harm and can even work around the nest with your bare hands and they'll just sit there and watch you like a bunch of cats. Of course the newer workers usually freak out but I don't ever really need to reach near their nest.
Edited by Studio, May 8 2019 - 9:22 PM.
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#7
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Posted May 9 2019 - 7:55 AM
I think we should!! I've been catching wasps everywhere for the fast few years as well as hornets and I'd LOVE to get advice from others as well as share my info. It just doesn't seem to be many who do keep them but maybe if we make one we'll have more people interested!
Keeps:
1:Pogonomymex occidentalis
4: Tetramorium immigrans
2 Reticulitermes flavipes
#8
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Posted May 14 2019 - 6:47 PM
I want to see some one catch and rear parasitic wasps like velvet ants and cuckoo wasps.
- Gracegarden likes this
#9
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Posted May 14 2019 - 7:39 PM
Mutillidae are easy to keep. Small aquarium, some sand, maybe some decor. A water dish, and a dish for feeding. A heat lamp is appreciated by some species. I never fed anything but sugar water. Females will last a long time - I had a couple Dasymutilla occidentalis last a year and a half. You can mix and match different species and they all ignore each other for the most part. When they do get into squabbles it’s rather endearing to hear, as they stridulate and squeak at each other.
Edited by 123LordOfAnts123, May 14 2019 - 7:40 PM.
#10
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Posted July 25 2019 - 11:58 AM
My teenage son just started keeping a velvet ant, but we also have a number of ichneumonid wasps. Their host is the common black swallowtail caterpillar. As far as I know, we have 2 female wasps mated with one male, and both have laid eggs in the 5 or so caterpillars we have given them. The caterpillars are in a tank waiting to see if we have been successful--the adult wasps should emerge from the chrysalis instead of the butterfly. I do not know how long the adult ichneumonid wasps live yet, but it is interesting watching the females hunt and lay eggs. The black swallowtails are easy to raise--they just eat fresh dill.
I think my son is determined to catch cicada killer wasps and maybe dig up a burrow to see if he can find a host for his velvet ant. I don't think the female cicada killers have emerged yet though, even though the males are out. The question is WHEN to try to dig up the burrow--how old do the cicada killer larva need to be?
#11
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Posted July 25 2019 - 6:43 PM
The problem with a wasp section is that there is really only maybe 3-5 people who keep wasps. I keep wasps, and have a Journal on the Off-Topic Journal board, I don't think at this time that wasps would be a big enough thing for their own board.
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#12
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Posted July 26 2019 - 6:51 AM
Just put it in the bee section. Most people can't tell the difference between a bee, wasp, or hornet.
- AntPhycho likes this
#13
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Posted July 26 2019 - 8:44 AM
My teenage son just started keeping a velvet ant, but we also have a number of ichneumonid wasps. Their host is the common black swallowtail caterpillar. As far as I know, we have 2 female wasps mated with one male, and both have laid eggs in the 5 or so caterpillars we have given them. The caterpillars are in a tank waiting to see if we have been successful--the adult wasps should emerge from the chrysalis instead of the butterfly. I do not know how long the adult ichneumonid wasps live yet, but it is interesting watching the females hunt and lay eggs. The black swallowtails are easy to raise--they just eat fresh dill.
I think my son is determined to catch cicada killer wasps and maybe dig up a burrow to see if he can find a host for his velvet ant. I don't think the female cicada killers have emerged yet though, even though the males are out. The question is WHEN to try to dig up the burrow--how old do the cicada killer larva need to be?
There are a couple huge males flying around my yard right now. I'm very (I'm) patiently waiting for the females to come out.

My Main Journal | My Neivamyrmex Journal | My Ant Adoption | My YouTube
Join the TennesseeAnts Discord Server! https://discord.gg/JbKwPgs
#14
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Posted July 26 2019 - 2:54 PM
There is a wasp nest outside my house that I enjoy watching. I can even see the brood in their nest. When I last checked, the queen got her first workers for this year (they all die in the fall).
- Skwiggledork likes this
"God made..... all the creatures that move along the ground according to their kinds (including ants). And God saw that it was good. Genesis 1:25 NIV version
Keeping:
Formica cf. pallidefulva, cf. incerta, cf. argentea
Formica cf. aserva, cf. subintegra
Myrmica sp.
Lasius neoniger, brevicornis
#15
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Posted July 26 2019 - 8:20 PM
My teenage son just started keeping a velvet ant, but we also have a number of ichneumonid wasps. Their host is the common black swallowtail caterpillar. As far as I know, we have 2 female wasps mated with one male, and both have laid eggs in the 5 or so caterpillars we have given them. The caterpillars are in a tank waiting to see if we have been successful--the adult wasps should emerge from the chrysalis instead of the butterfly. I do not know how long the adult ichneumonid wasps live yet, but it is interesting watching the females hunt and lay eggs. The black swallowtails are easy to raise--they just eat fresh dill.
I think my son is determined to catch cicada killer wasps and maybe dig up a burrow to see if he can find a host for his velvet ant. I don't think the female cicada killers have emerged yet though, even though the males are out. The question is WHEN to try to dig up the burrow--how old do the cicada killer larva need to be?
I saw a cicada killer in china decapitate a cicada over the course of 10 minutes. The cicada was still alive.
- Skwiggledork likes this
#16
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Posted July 27 2019 - 7:00 AM
Looks like a grass carrying wasp is the first to decide to use my bee hotel. I don't think I am going to "keep" them, but I am excited to see them.
#17
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Posted July 27 2019 - 5:30 PM

poor wasp... the parasite has been parasitized by mites. And hitchhiked by a pseudo scorpion.
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#18
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Posted August 31 2019 - 3:52 PM
Just put it in the bee section. Most people can't tell the difference between a bee, wasp, or hornet.
Sadly, its true!!
"You don't get what you want. You get what you deserve".
#19
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Posted August 31 2019 - 4:04 PM
This is getting out of hand!
This is formiculture, not hymenoptraculture!
"The Off-topic" section is your wasp section.
Edited by Martialis, August 31 2019 - 4:05 PM.
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