The Hitch-hiker


Spilichneumon Wasp at Marketplace in Friday Harbor

Today as I was leaving the store after grocery shopping in Friday Harbor at Marketplace (the store it took me forever to find when I first moved here, and known as the store for the “locals”), I opened the door to my truck and found this cute little red wasp on the door handle. I’m not sure how it got there, but this is one hitch-hiker I had no problem picking up. And, pick it up, I did! I conveniently scooped it to safety in a brand new insulated cup I scored on sale at our local Ace Hardware for $10. It has little bears and forest trees on it. It was also perfect for securing the wasp for our ride back to the house.

When I got home, I left the cup by the door for a bit to unload my groceries, but got my camera afterwards and carried my hitch-hiker over to a stack of alder logs we collected and piled up into a wildlife stack. Those logs are “dead” to most humans, but for all the little critters that were in them when they blew over and broke into chunks, they are FULL of life! One had a perfect knot hole that my wasp targeted right away and will probably stay holed up for the better part of next week since we have rain in the forecast. I wish more people would see dead and dying trees as something of value (other than to chip or burn). They are stores of food for birds, and shelter for many other organisms. Dead and dying trees are often more interesting to me than live ones. You just have to change your perspective and perhaps you will see what I do too!

The wasp critter is in the family Ichneumonidae. It’s in the Genus Spilichneumon, I believe. These wasps hunt and parasitize Noctuid moth caterpillars. They are most excellent pest predators! The female wasp will lay one egg inside each caterpillar she finds and then her egg will hatch and the larva will develop in the caterpillar’s body. That’s THE END of the caterpillar. 🐛

Thanks for reading!

Knothole in tree

If you are curious to learn more, here are two links to get you started. https://bugeric.blogspot.com/2012/03/wasp-wednesday-spilichneumon.html and https://bugguide.net/node/view/444129

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