What is the mud Dauber?
Mud Daubers are one of the few insects that puts eggs in the nest of the mud. Depending on the species, nests may look like small adobe mounds or harsh tubes. Unlike paper wasps, mud Daubers are lonely; Unlike many stinging insects, they are rarely harmful to people. Only if they are thoroughly provoked by manipulation, will they stab a person. It is mostly with paralyzed spiders, dozens wrapped in every chamber that the mud Daubers store their nest to feed the larvae. After filling one of the cells with food laids the mud dauber eggs and seals the passage. Her work with this section is done and she moves to collect food for another. Although it is a female mud Dauber that builds a nest, in some species a man will help in the collection of spiders and can also serve as a guard to prevent predators from theft.
The designation of the mud Dauber includes several varieties of wasps. Blue mudder and black and yellow mud dauber, both with waist thin thinMi, they are members of the SPHECIDAE family and are related to Digger wasps. The nests that build black and yellow mud Dauber are collections of pipes assembled into irregularly spherical shape, the size of a small apple. The blue mud Dauber often uses abandoned nests of other mud -dubbers than to build his own. It has a significant preference for black widows, especially young. The organ pipes of the Muder, whose name comes from the pipes of the different lengths of its nest, is part of the Crabronidae family, formerly considered the subfamily SPHECIDAE.
The methods of building nesting differ between the varieties of the mud Dauber. The organ tube of the mud Dauber finds mud elsewhere and carries it in its mandibles to the nest where it forms it into tunnels. Several women can build a cluster, which usually consists of 5 to 7 pipes. Black and yellow mud Dauber uses the same technique. However, the blue mud Dauber carries a water droplet and mixes them with dirt. If it is a re -use of a nest, a modThe rice Dauber uses water to repair water. MUD Daubers can work quickly and complete a nest containing many offspring within one day. As mud Daubers build, their bodies vibrate or hum, behavior that can help distribute mud. When the nest is in place, the mud Daubers apply the final layer of mud, which smoothes and stabilizes the structure. After 9 months in the nest, new mud Daubers appears. They are free for several days, drink nectar and explore life outside the MUD tunnel. Then the cycle begins again as friends, hunting and building.
While the mud Daubers are not aggressive, with the exception of spiders, the presence of their nests can cause problems. The narrow entrances of bats and some birds may become impassable if the Daubers muders decided to build there. The Muds sometimes build nests in small areas of aircraft that help to determine air pressure, and these can dangerously disrupt values.