We just had to share this wonderful capture of a dragonfly enjoying the lake edge at Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden. Did you know that dragonflies eat mosquitos? We love to have these guys around! Image by Garden visitor Robert Pelny. #RVA #Dragonfly #nature #photography (at Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden)
Where I live, they’re not particularly assertive–not like the yellow jackets of north america, who’ll nyoom in on your picnic and completely shirk all social decency and ignore any polite request to kindly leave. There are also over a hundred thousand different species, and are all uniquely wonderful. Some of their behaviors are also excellent fodder for horror genre monsters…
Here are a few of my personal favorites!:
Potter wasps are a common name for about 200 different genera of wasp. These guys make little clay pots to lay their eggs in. Entombed in these clay pots are also a paralyzed prey item (usually a grub of some kind) which is left in there as a snack for Jr. once they hatch. I find a lot of entertainment in watching these wasps flying around clutching wads of clay or transporting a grub that is sometimes just a little too heavy for them.
(credit) A wasp recently built three of these little pots in my mailbox and I’m eagerly waiting for the new adults to emerge (sorry, mailman…)
The Spider wasp is the only manner of local wasp that had the audacity to sting me for minding my own business. The specimen that nailed me was a small one, and this sting was surprisingly persistent with just enough pain to be noticeable. That sting is not specifically designed to be effective on me, though. It is designed to immobilize spiders. Again, this is a common name that encompasses a wide breadth of species. The one which stung me was of the smaller sized species… but this common name (and spider-hunting behavior) also includes the infamous “tarantula hawk” that some americans might be familiar with.
Cow Killer Wasps have been a personal favorite since childhood. I have never in my life seen a real living specimen, but they just look so soft and beautiful. I was also very enthralled by the notion that a sting could be so terribly painful that it ‘could kill a cow’. My enthusiasm for this stunning and unique looking species was only a little bit dampened upon reading that rumors of its cow-killing ability have been greatly exaggerated.
If all of these guys so far are just a little too much of a “horror genre” brand of “neat” for you, then the dwarf scelionid wasp might inspire you to re-evaluate the notion that all wasps are scary, mean little buggers. Because the dwarf scelionid is so god damn cute. Which–you’re totally free to disagree with me about it, but you’d still be wrong.
but out of all of them i’ve seen, this post talking about an american pitcher plant with a mutation is probably my fave. i contacted op over dm after seeing it and they say that the plant lives a happy life in the ground in a perfectly reasonable climate, but always sends up 2-3 of these when it comes back up each year (for comparison, here’s another post showing what these pitcher plants usually look like):
common topics in this subreddit include:
-’my carnivorous plant is cute!!!!!!!!!!’
-’my carnivorous plant is flowering!!!!!!!’
-’my carnivorous plant ate something weird!!!!!!!!!’
-’my carnviorous plant has something weird about to fall into it!!!!!!!!!!’
-canriovous plant-mediated bug carnage
-new cultivars and stuff
-a few people selling/trading
-new carnivorous plant news and research
-new discoveries, whenever they happen
-people asking questions about carnivorous plant care and more experienced people answering
-people posting their CRAZY beautiful carnivorous plant setups like HOW:
they also have a dedicated carnivorous plant discord organized by plant family lmao, here’s the invite, im bolding this because i get a lot of questions about where my occasional plant-related discord screenshots come from and i actually don’t have a dedicated server of my own for that (yet) but i am in this one so
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