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Unnamed spotting

Description:

The bright color and long spear-tail catch my attention. It is a first time for me to see the insect. Body length is about 2 cm. The nail like tail (maybe an ovipositor) is about the same length. It may belong to the order of Hymenoptera. Some description verbatim paste from wikipedia.org (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ichneumonid... ===start of copied text=== Some species of ichneumon wasps lay their eggs in the ground, but most inject them directly into a host's body, typically into a larva or pupa. Host information has been notably summed up by J.F. Aubert, J.F. Perkins, and H.T. Townes and coworkers.[3] In some of the largest species, namely from the genera Megarhyssa and Rhyssa, both sexes will wander over the surface of logs, and tree trunks, tapping with their antennae. Each sex does so for a different reason; females are searching for the scent of wood boring larvae of the horntail wasps (hymenopteran family Siricidae) upon which to lay eggs, males are searching for emerging females with which to mate. Upon sensing the vibrations emitted by a wood-boring host, the female wasp will drill her ovipositor into the substrate until it reaches the cavity wherein lies the host. She then injects an egg through the hollow tube into the body cavity. There the egg will hatch and the resulting larva will devour its host before emergence. How a female is able to drill with her ovipositor into solid wood is still somewhat of a mystery to science, though it has been found that there is metal (ionized manganese or zinc) in the extreme tip of some species' ovipositors. The adult insect, following pupation is faced with the problem of extricating itself from tunnels of its host. Fortunately, the high metal concentrations are not limited to the female's ovipositor as the mandibles of the adult are also hardened with metals and it uses these to chew itself out of the wood.[4]

Habitat:

Mixed plantation.

Notes:

It may be a species unknown to science.

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1 Comment

ChunXingWong
ChunXingWong 11 years ago

Beautiful spotting.
Sulawesi has many more unknown beauties waiting to be spotted.

JohnTasirin
Spotted by
JohnTasirin

Manado, Indonesia

Spotted on Jan 19, 2013
Submitted on Jan 20, 2013

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Reference

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