
The Chrysidid collection can be carried out on the field through traps (Malaise and yellow dishes) or through sight-hunting with a butterfly net (aluminum handle, soft plastic net bag).
Malaise
trap. This trap consists of a kind of Canadian tent,
dark in color, with a vertical wall in the middle which
prevents the flying
wasps to pass through by forcing them to fly upward. On the
corner top of the tent there's a hole which lets the
daily light
filter
through and attracts the wasps which are flying in
the direction of the light in order to escape. The
hole brings a transparent
plastic tube which ends into a large bottle containing a
preserving liquid (75% alcohol + water), where the
wasps will fall. Malaise
trap
is cumbersome and needs to be set on the flying routes of
the wasps. For this reason, the trap is advisable for
areas
where it won't attract the attention of too curious people.
You need to control the collecting bottle every 3-5
days,
depending on many factors. However, Malaise trap is a massive
collecting method, which won't sample only the wasps
you are
looking for, but everything is flying there, unconditionally.
Moericke
traps (yellow pan traps). You simply need the normal
plastic dishes used for parties, but painted of intense
yellow color
(we suggest the spray acrylic enamel) and positioned close
to the flying routes of the Chrysidids: rocks, paths,
wood-piles,
seasoned bushes. Once positioned, the plates need to be filled
up with a mixture of three elements: water (in order to make
the wasp drown), soap (in order to break off the surficial
tension of the water and preventing the floating of the wasp)
and salt (in order to preserve the specimens for some days).
Salt is a good preserving mineral, but it will make the colors
of the wasps "opaque" in case of long-lasting permanence;
therfore it is important to control the content of the dishes
periodically. The meaning of the yellow color comes from
the fact that many flying insects orient toward the flowers
through
visual indications. The yellow color is one of the best colors
to attract insects. Yellow is also the wavelength reflected
by young leaves.
Sight-hunting.
Flowers, rocks, walls, woods, wood-piles, hollow branches,
sandy soils inhabited by other wasps/bees, dry walls, palissades,
wood stakes, etc. Chrysidids rest generally for few second
on these places and then they fly quickly to the next place,
usually following an invisible route, probably chemically
marked and generally constant. It is not difficult to scare
a specimen and, remaining in wait, see it rest again after
few minutes on the same point or on the same path. You need
to pay attention to your position regarding the sun and the
shadow when you approach the resting place of the wasps. Sometimes,
when you shot your net on a specimen resting on a wall or
on wood, you will see the wasp remain motionless or point
to escape under the edge of the net; in these cases you have
to "convince" the wasp to fly upwards in the bag. Once the
wasp is in the bag, you have to push it in your bottle containing
the mortal agent, carrying the bottle inside the bag. The
toxic liquid generally used to kill the chrysidids is the
ethyl acetate, either concentrated or diluted. Ethyl acetate
is absolutely toxic when used, so avoid ingestion, inhalation
and contact. Your poliethylene (acid-resistant) killing bottle
must have an hermethic cap easy to twist with one hand. The
toxic agent can impregnate a cotton bottom or a cork sawdust
inside the bottle.
An
alternative collection method consists in the breeding of
nests made by other wasps, from which chrysidids could
emerge as hosts. Examples of nests could be the mud cells
of Sphecids and of Eumenids, or the Cynipid galls housed by
secondary hosts (Sphecids of the genus Pemphredon), or the
hollow and dried branches used by many Sphecids and Apoids.
Consequently this method allows you to reach a deeper knowledge
on Chrysidid relationships with hosts.
For citation purposes
Agnoli G.L. & Rosa P., Chrysis.net website, interim version
10-Jan-2010
, URL: http://www.chrysis.net/.