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MineralMan

(151,140 posts)
23. You're the first person other than myself who has ever shown an interest
Fri May 8, 2020, 02:14 PM
May 2020

in those giant wasps. There are smaller wasps like that that prey on smaller spiders, as well, like wolf spiders. I've encountered many of those, too. None have ever seemed aggressive, though. They're focused on what they do, and probably aren't even aware of humans at all, unless we bother them.

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Murder Hornet? I Scoff at It. [View all] MineralMan May 2020 OP
we have them too, in AZ Kali May 2020 #1
Yes. Wherever there are tarantulas, you'll find those wasps. MineralMan May 2020 #6
Just to be clear - tarantula hawks and murder hornets are two different things. n/t Ms. Toad May 2020 #2
Yes, they are. One is an invasive species. The other is native to the USA. MineralMan May 2020 #5
Thanks but no thanks. MontanaMama May 2020 #3
Terrified of those things. I've removed certain white-flowering shrubs BusyBeingBest May 2020 #4
I'm fond of tarantulas, too. MineralMan May 2020 #7
Yikes ismnotwasm May 2020 #8
Well, except for your Giant Asian Hornets. BusyBeingBest May 2020 #9
That's true. Southern California is a desert, really. MineralMan May 2020 #10
They don't decimate honeybee colonies, however Cirque du So-What May 2020 #11
That's true, of course. MineralMan May 2020 #12
Japanese honeybees have evolved a smothering/overheating defense Cirque du So-What May 2020 #13
Dang, that's a big mofo happybird May 2020 #14
I know. I was warned about the tarantula hawks at a very early age. MineralMan May 2020 #15
not the same species, not close either. BGBD May 2020 #16
Yes. I know that. I'm presenting the Tarantula Hawk as even MineralMan May 2020 #19
did you see the video of BGBD May 2020 #24
let's all hope that the worst of all (the Executioner Wasp of Central & South America) doesnt invade Celerity May 2020 #17
I can't stand ANY bug that has a needle in it's ass. Archae May 2020 #18
I've never heard or seen one of those things PlanetBev May 2020 #20
They're not common, really. The only place you'd ever see them is MineralMan May 2020 #22
The scary part is that "murder hornets" act as colony, Tarantula hawks are solitary critters. denbot May 2020 #21
You're the first person other than myself who has ever shown an interest MineralMan May 2020 #23
I'm more concerned about our honey bees. Niagara May 2020 #25
I'm a child of the Africanized Killer Bee era -- I scoff at all of it. tandem5 May 2020 #26
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