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SpeciesVespula squamosa - Southern Yellowjacket

Unknown Ground Hornet - Vespula squamosaMale Southern Yellowjacket? - Vespula squamosa - maleSouthern Yellowjacket - Vespula squamosa - maleVespula squamosaVespula sp, ID please - Vespula squamosa - femalePennsylvania Yellow Jacket - Vespula squamosa - femaleVespula squamosa ? - Vespula squamosaVespula squamosa  - Vespula squamosa - female
Classification
KingdomAnimalia (Animals)
PhylumArthropoda (Arthropods)
SubphylumHexapoda (Hexapods)
ClassInsecta (Insects)
OrderHymenoptera (Ants, Bees, Wasps and Sawflies)
No Taxon (Aculeata - Ants, Bees and Stinging Wasps)
SuperfamilyVespoidea
FamilyVespidae
SubfamilyVespinae (Hornets and Yellowjackets)
GenusVespula (Ground Yellowjackets)
Speciessquamosa (Southern Yellowjacket)
Explanation of Names
Vespula squamosa (Drury 1773)
Size
Forewing: worker 9.5–11.0 mm, ♀ 15.0–16.5 mm, ♂ ~12.5 mm
Identification
Distinctive; all castes possess conspicuous yellow longitudinal stripes on the mesoscutum, a trait shared with the closely-related allopatricV. sulphurea but no species within its range. The queens and workers are dimorphic. Workers and males have similar abdominal patterns, with no free spots and an unusual pair of lateral yellow stripes through the black basal band of the second tergite. Queens are quite large for a yellowjacket, with orange fascia on the abdomen expanded to nearly obliterate the dark markings.(1)(2)

   
Queen (♀♀) Worker (♀) Male (♂)
Range
e. US to Honduras. The most southerlyVespula species(3)(4); Recorded in 2023 in CT on iNaturalist, and in 2024 in both CT and MA (Bugguide and iNaturalist).
Habitat
A colony found in southwestern Pennsylvania was subterranean in a large open grassy field (B. Coulter, pers. ob.). This species has a propensity to build (or usurp) nests in disturbed habitats.(1)
Season
Emerges in spring later than its frequent host,Vespula maculifrons, so that there are numerous young colonies available for usurpation. In the southeastern US, it typically appears about a month aftermaculifrons, and the colonies tend to decline in November in most of the range (earlier thanmaculifrons).(1) This species is the most frequent nativeVespula to form perennialpolygynous colonies in the southernmost portions of its range.
Life Cycle
Queens are facultative temporary social parasites, and frequently usurp established young nests of other yellowjacket species, usuallyV. maculifrons. There are also records of this species utilizingV. vidua andV. flavopilosa(5) as hosts. The queens are extremely large and robust for a yellowjacket, a trait which surely helps them to overpower and kill the host queens of the colonies they usurp. A study in Georgia found that about 80% ofV. squamosa colonies began by usurpation of aV. maculifrons colony.(1) Facultative temporary social parasitism means that the species may parasitize other species, but is still capable of founding its own colonies, and it retains a worker caste. After killing the host queen, thesquamosa adopts the nest and host workers, who raise her offspring. The colony eventually becomes puresquamosa as the original host workers die off.
See Also
Several mimics exist:


Spilomyia texana (Diptera: Syrphidae)


Milesia scutellata (Diptera: Syrphidae)


Milesia virginiensis (Diptera: Syrphidae)


Laphria saffrana (Diptera: Asilidae)


Paranthrene simulans (Lepidoptera: Sesiidae)
Print References
Tissot A.N., Robinson F.A. (1954) Some unusual insect nests. Fla. Entomol. 37: 73-92.Full text
Internet References
Works Cited
1.Yellowjackets of America North of Mexico
Akre, R.D., A. Greene, J.F. MacDonald, P.J. Landolt, and H.G. Davis. 1980. U.S. Department of Agriculture.
2.Identification Atlas of the Vespidae (Hymenoptera, Aculeata) of the Northeastern Nearctic Region
Matthias Buck, Stephen A. Marshall, and David K. B. Cheung. 2008. Biological Survey of Canada [Canadian Journal of Arthropod Identification].
3.Checklist of the species of the subfamily Vespinae (Insecta: Hymenoptera: Vespidae)
Carpenter, James M., and Jun-ichi Kojima. 1997. Nat. Hist. Bulletin of Ibaraki Univ. 1:51-92.
4.First Records From Hondurus of a Yellowjacket Wasp, Vespula squamosa (Drury) (Hymenoptera: Vespidae: Vespinae)
Hunt, James H., Ronald D. Cave, and Gerardo D. Borjas. 2001. Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society 74:118-119.
5.Nesting Biology of the Yellowjacket, Vespula flavopilosa (Hymenoptera: Vespidae)
MacDonald, J. F., R. W. Matthews, and R. S. Jacobson. 1980. Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society 53:448-458.
Contributed byHannah Nendick-Mason on 17 September, 2004 - 2:28pm
Additional contributions byBeatriz Moisset,urtica,Matthias Buck,Mike Quinn,Ben Coulter,Robert Lord Zimlich,v belov,PaleoJon,bdagley
Last updated 1 October, 2024 - 11:14am

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