Wasps

cuckoo wasp, types of wasps
A back of the envelope calculation finds over twelve thousand types of wasps in the United States, normally grouped into larger super families and families. The Cuckoo wasp, a common garden species, is one of them.

Fortunately only a small percentage of wasps, primarily the Yellowjackets and Paper Wasps pose any concern to humans because of their habit of building nests in residential areas and their tendency to sting (multiple times) as a defensive mechanism, when their nests are threatened.

Paper Wasps


European paper wasp on a pine tree, types of paper wasps
Removing the nest while it is being built, rather than waiting for nest to be completed and filled with wasps removes most of the threat to family members. Looking under the porch awnings and removing the nests with a broom during the spring should be enough to discourage the queen and drones from rebuilding.

Either way, it is necessary to remove the nest in order to remove the wasps.

The European paper wasp (Polistes dominula) , the most wide ranging of all the types of paper wasps in the United States, was introduced by colonialists, and it has spread across the continent.

Northern Paper Wasp, types of paper wasps
Northern Paper Wasp

polistes comanchus
Polistes comanchus

Western paper wasp, Polistes aurifer
Polistes flavus

Western paper wasp, Polistes aurifer
Golden paper wasp

paper wasp, polistes exclamens
Polistes exclamans
picture of paper wasp, polistes dorsalis
Polistes dorsalis

Polistes annularis
Polistes annularis

types of paper wasps in the Southeast United States
Bellicousus

types of paper wasps, Red Wasp
Red Wasp

types of paper wasps, Polistes metricus
Polistes metricus

flower polistes major
Polistes major

Yellowjackets


Three types or genera of yellowjackets inhabit all parts of the United States.
  • Aerial Nesters: genus Dolichovespula
  • Ground Nesters: genus Vespula
  • Hornets: genus Vespa
The dichotomy between aerial and ground nesting yellowjackets is not perfect. Sometimes the aerial nesters do build ground nests. Sometimes the ground nesters build aerial nests. With a few exceptions, the aerial nesters tend to be northern species. Perhaps it is because northern grounds are too cold most of the year to support the nesting process.

Regardless of their nest building habits, all yellowjackets cause concern because as social insects, they live in large groups and when the nest needs defending they can sting multiple times without losing their stinger. In most instances the stings are painful and, they could be life threatening to some people.

Bald-faced Hornet, yellowjacket pictures
Bald-faced Hornet

Sandhills hornet or common aerial yellowjacket, yellowjacket pictures
Sandhills hornet

Northern Aerial Yellowjacket
Northern Aerial Yellowjacket

blackjacket
Vespa crabro are the only true hornets with any range in the United States. First introduced in the 19th century, its range has spread to most states east of the Mississippi river.
They also build aerial nests.

blackjacket
Blackjacket

picture of an Eastern Yellowjacket
Eastern Yellowjacket

Western Yellowjacket
Western Yellowjacket

Southern Yellowjacket, yellowjacket pictures
Southern Yellowjacket.

Downy Yellowjacket
Downy Yellowjacket

German Yellowjacket
German Yellowjackets

picture of an Alaska Yellowjacket
Sometimes it’s called the Alaska yellowjacket. However, Vespula alascensis is fairly widespread in the northern half of the United States.

Thread-waisted Wasts


picture of ammophila alberti, a thread-waisted Wasp
The family Sphecidae, thread-waisted wasps technically belongs to a larger grouping call apoid wasps, the progenitors of the bee family. North America hosts about 125 species divided into 11 genera. The thin body piece that connects the thorax and the abdomen explains the common name.

About one-half of the species belong to the Ammophila genus characterized by long, thin bodies often with a mixture of black and red bodies and legs. The picture shows ammophila alberti

What follows is a brief and tentative run down for some basic identification clues to help differentiate a few different species. All things being equal, it’s more than adequate to identify them at the genus level.

thread-waisted wast, Aammophila wrightii
Ammophila wrighti a very distinct species more brown than red in color.

picture of ammophila nigricans, a thread-waisted Wasp
Ammophila nigricans, for example has very dark wings and no markings on the thorax.

thread-waisted wast, ammophila-pictipennis
Ammophila pictpennis, another Eastern Species. can be identifies by the orange wings and absence of silver marks on the thorax.

thread-waisted wast, Aammophila procera
Finally, the presence of silver marks on thorax is used as the basic field identification clue for Ammophila procera.

thread-waisted wasp, Eremnophia aureonotata
Only one species in the Eremnophila genus and it’s fairly easy to identify. Abundant east of the Rocky Mountains. Look for it in the summer months. In the warmer climates it may hang around a bit longer.

Cutworm Wasp
Cutworm Wasp

picture of Yellow-legged Mud Dauber Wasp
Yellow-legged Mud Dauber

picture of Blue Mud Wasp
The Blue Mud wasp (Chalybion californicum) gets credit for using Black Widow spiders as the larval food. They are fairly common across the United States.

Great Black Digger Wasp
Great Black Digger wasp

Great Golden Digger Wasp
Great Golden Digger

Katydid Wasp

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Seven thread-waisted wasps in the genus Prionyx can be found from coast to coast.

Mexican Grass Carrying Wasp
Six different grass carrying wasps – Mexican Grass Carrying Wasp or I. apicalis

Brown-legged Grass Carrying Wasp, thread-waisted wasps
Brown-legged Grass Carrying Wasp

Potter and Mason Wasps


potter wasp nest
Potter and Mason Wasps (Eumeninae), the most diverse of the five vespid subfamilies, receive their name based on their pot shaped mud nests.

potter wasp in the Ancistrocerus genus
Ancistrocerus genera

Catskill Potter Wasp
Catskill Potter Wasp

one-banded mason wasp
One-banded Mason Wasp

potter wasps
Six bands and a spot on the abdomen suggests the possibility of a species in the stenodynerus genus.

potter wasp in the genus parancistrocerus
A final note on using abdominal bands for potter wasp identification. Sometimes, not always two yellow bands on the abdomen identify species in the genus Parancistrocerus.

picture of  Euodynerus species from New Mexico, potter and mason wasps
Euodynerus genera

Fraternal Potter Wasp
The Fraternal potter wasp

Cross Potter wasp, eumenes-crucifera, potter and mason wasps series
Cross Potter wasp

Monobia quadridens - Four-toothed Mason Wasp
Four-toothed Mason Wasp

mason wasp, Pseudodynerus quadrisectus, Potter wasps
Pseudodynerus quadrisectus looks very similar to the Four-toothed Mason Wasp. However, the two bands on the abdomen help differentiate it.

mason wasp, Euodynerus megaera
Eudynerus megaera

mason wasp, euodynerus-foraminatus
Euodynerus is a large genus of mason wasps. Here’s another species with a black body and yellow markings. It’s perhaps in the foraminatus group.

Sand Wasps


picture of an Eastern Cicada Killer wasp, sand wasps
Sand wasps is the common name given to the species of wasps in the Crabronidae family. They go by common names such as sand wasps, weevil wasps, square-headed wasps and more.

With over twelve hundred species documented in the United States, there’s always a handful in and around the home and garden. Large and small, colorful eyes are often a good first ID tip for identifying them.

The top picture shows the Eastern Cicada Killer, an easily identified large species.

Stizus brevipennis
Like the Eastern Cicada killer, the Eastern stizus has brown eyes, brown legs and a pattern of spots and/or bands on the abdomen.

stizoides-renicinctus
Stizoides renicinctus

picture of an American Sand Wasp, Bembix americana
American Sand Wasp

picture of bicyrtes Sand Wasps
Bicyrtes

picture of Bicyrtes capnopterus Sand Wasp
Bicyrtes capnopterus. Note the brown legs and the two-toned antennae.

picture of sand wasp in the Nysson genus
Sure does look like a Nysson.

Sand wasp, bembecinus genus
Bembecinus.

Steniolia, sand wasps, Steniolia-scolopacea
Steniolia scolopacea

Steniolia, sand wasps
Steniolia tibialis

beewolf
Beewolves and Weevil Wasps, small and often yellow and black bodies species, hang around flower gardens waiting to snatch a honeybee or sweat bee from the flowers to serve as its larval host. About 30 species.

bee wolf, sand wasps
Beewolf

beewolf, sand wasps
Beewolf

, sand wasp picture
Weevil Wasp (Cerceris nigrescens)

Cerceris nigrescens male, a weevil wasp
Weevil Wasp (Cerceris nigrescens – male)

weevil
Weevil Wasp (Cerceris sextoides)

sand wasp in the Gorytes genus
Gorytes

Large ectemnius, square-headed wasp
Square-headed wasp with common name Large ectemnius.

square-headed wasp with a smiley face
Unknown smiley faced square-headed wasp

astata sand wasp picture
There’s always an exception to the colorful rule. This astata species has a solid black color.

sand wasp in Tachysphex genus
Tachysphex

sand wasp in the genus Glenostictia
Probably Glenostictia pictifrons

Spider Wasps


Spider wasp in the Aporus genus
Spider wasps, a diverse family (about 300 species) belong to a larger superfamily (Pompiloidea) that includes four families.
Spider wasp identification can be difficult or easy, depending on the identification purpose. The large number of species means that entomologists often need the use of microscopes to sort through multiple physical traits in order to determine identification at the species level. Fortunately some species exhibit specific large scale body patterns that make field identification or identification by pictures useful.

tarantula hawk
Tarantula hawks

spider wasp in the Ageniellaa genus
The red body and other visible physical characteristics such as the dark wings of the next wasp suggest it belongs to the Genus Ageniella.

picture of an Eastern Tawny Horned
Eastern Tawny Horned spider wasp

spider wasp, Priocnemis oregona
Priocnemis oregona

spider wasp, Poecilopompilus algidus
Poecilopompilus algidus

Velvet Ants


male common Eastern Velvet Ant
Velvet ants get their common name based on the wingless females and their body resemblance to ants. Furry bodies, however, do not translate them into warm and fuzzy wasps.
female Common Eastern Velvet Ant
Females lack wings and are known to have a powerful sting and go by the nickname cow killers. Males do not sting.

male velvet ant in the Timulla genus
Timmula genus

male velvet ant
Here’s an unidentified female velvet any.

female velvet ant
Here’s a similar looking female velvet ant seen nearby the male. They might be a variation of the Pacific Velvet Ant.


Black Giant Ichneumon wasp,  part of the Ichnumenon  wasps series
Exact counts of wasp species remain a bit soft because entomologists expect many remain undescribed. Regardless, most of the species belong to the Parasitic wasps category, a catch all term that applies to the fact that they skip nest building and deposit their eggs directly or in immediate vicinity of their prey.

With over ten thousand parasitic wasps already identified in the United States, they rank as the largest group of wasps, accounting for roughly seventy-five percent of all wasp species.

Pelecinid Wasp
Pelecinid wasp

picture of a
Chalcidoid Wasps -Lleucospis affinisin

gall from a gall wasp
Gall wasps in the larger Cynipoidea superfamily, are the third largest group of parasitic wasps. Most are also very small.

carrot wasp
Carrot Wasps

picture of a
With close to seven thousand documented species members of the Superfamily Ichneumonoidea rank as the largest group of parasitic wasps.

Together with the Chalcidoid and Cynipoidea wasps, they represent around ninety percent of all known, native parasitic wasps.

The picture shows a species with no common name, Opheltes glaucopterus.

black and red Braconid wasp with large ovipositor
The black and red body on the wasp in the next picture, along with the white stripes on the antennae suggests a Braconid wasp.

fairly large ichneumon wasp without ovipositor
Male ichneumon wasps, like the one pictured lack an ovipositor which can also cause identification confusion. In these cases, the long antennae serves as the best clue for situating the wasp in the picture with the Ichneumon.

picture of an ichneumon wasp with spot on bottom of thorax
This male has a thinner waist, and again the long antennae serves as a clue for placing it in the Ichneumon group.

picture of a
Therion genus

Arotes amoenus
Arotes amoenus

picture of a
Baryceros texanus

picture of a
Pimpla pedalis

picture of an ichnumenon wasp, exetastes-suaveolens
Exetastes suaveolens

Tiphiid Wasps
Another family of flower wasps, Tiphiid Wasps, can be identified by thin, long bodies and a hooked appendage at the end of the abdomen.

Sawfly
The question, ‘why are they called sawflies if they are in the wasp category’ sounds reasonable. Consider the sawfly ovipositor. Many of the parasitic wasps have ovipositors, and therefore it’s reasonable to assume that a close inspection of the shape and size of the ovipositor might help with initial identification. A close up view of a Sawfly ovipositor shows a saw like appendage.

Trichiosoma triangulum, part of the sawflies collection
Caterpillars and adults come in a variety of shapes, colors and sizes. Cimbicid sawflies grow large.