Identification, Images, & Information
For Insects, Spiders & Their Kin
For the United States & Canada
Photo#461077
What is it? - Rhyssa alaskensis - female

What is it? - Rhyssa alaskensis - Female

Randle, Lewis County, Washington, USA
October 2, 2010
Size: approx 4"
With tail extended.

Images of this individual: tag all
Ovipositing. What is it? - Rhyssa alaskensis - female What is it? - Rhyssa alaskensis - female

Comments

Moved
Moved from Rhyssa.

That "tail" . . .
is an ovipositor. I don't think it's retractable. Some kinds of female parasitic wasps have impressive ones.

 
It was enough
...to make me nervous when I got up close to take its picture, since we didn't know then if that was a stinger or what. :)

Moved
Oviposition by this species into your freshly split spruce indicates that siricid wood wasps of some kind are living in it. In fact, the frass in the lower left of image 461077 suggests a point where the split has gut through a wood wasp gallery. As for your concern about getting close to the Rhyssa female, it might be able to prick you with the ovipositor if you hold the individual with your fingers--I once had a female Megarhyssa prick me when I was removing it from my net--but there wouldn't be a jolt like there would be in the case of some Ichneumonidae of genera like Ophion or Netelia.

Moved from ID Request.

 
Thank you.
I don't believe I'll be holding one, but interesting to read about and observe. I saw two fight, a brief battle, while one of them had her larger ovipositor stuck in the wood. She was knocked sideways, but managed to right herself and go on about her business. Thanks also for the tip about the siricid wood wasps.

 
Interesting
As far as I know, I have never encountered a mention of a female rhyssine attempting to remove another in its attempt to oviposit into a host. Hence, it is a very interesting observation.