Pepsis grossa

Pepsis grossa

''Pepsis grossa'' is a very large species of pepsine spider wasp from the southern part of North America, south to northern South America. It preys on tarantula spiders, giving rise to the name tarantula hawk for the wasps in the genus ''Pepsis'' and the related ''Hemipepsis''.
Pepsis grossa or Tarantula Hawk wasp Pepsis grossa formerly formosa or Tarantula Hawk Wasp
The female wasp usually attacks the tarantula in or near its ground burrow with a sting to its abdomen. When paralyzed, the wasp drags it back into the spider’s burrow and lays one egg on the spider, plugging the burrow opening. The Tarantula Wasp larvae feeds on the paralyzed living spider. Adult wasps feed on nectar and pollen.

Along with its aposematic coloration (red wings) and their dangerous stinger, considered to be the second most painful insect sting in the world, after that of the bullet ant, they have few predators. The roadrunner bird and the bullfrog are two of its few predators.

15 species of Pepsis wasps are found in the United States with 9 of those occurring in desert regions. In the deserts of Southwestern USA like Arizona where I live, two species of Tarantula Hawks are common, pepsis formosa and pepsis thisbe. These wasps can reach almost 2 inches in length. They are solitary wasps and not generally considered aggressive, but I have crossed their paths on hiking trips several times.
https://www.jungledragon.com/image/126007/pepsis_formosa_or_trantual_hawk_wasp.html
https://www.jungledragon.com/image/126009/pepsis_formosa_or_trantual_hawk_wasp.html Fall,Geotagged,Pepsis grossa,United States

Appearance

Only the females hunt, so only they are capable of delivering a sting, which is considered the second most painful of any insect sting; scoring 4.0 on the Schmidt sting pain index compared to the bullet ant's 4.0+. It is the state insect of New Mexico. The colour morphs are the xanthic orange-winged form and the melanic black winged form. In northern South America, a third form, known as "lygamorphic", has a dark base to the wings which have dark amber median patches and a pale tip.

Due in part to confusion over the distinctness of various color forms, until 2002 this species was known by the name ''Pepsis formosa'', including a subspecies ''P. formosa pattoni'', but C.R. Vardy synonymized both forms of ''P. formosa'' into ''P. grossa''.

The three color forms are normally geographically separated; the melanic form occurs in the western part of the North American range, the xanthic form predominates over the remainder of the distribution, except that lygamorphic individuals predominate in the southernmost part of the species range. Individuals of the melanic form of this species are difficult to separate from ''Pepsis mexicana'', but ''P. mexicana'' is always noticeably smaller than it. The female's body length is 30–51 mm, and the males measure 24–40 mm. The black and orange colour pattern, combined with the wasps' jerky behaviour and strong odour, give an aposematic warning to predators.

Males of this species are distinct within the genus ''Pepsis'' in that they have only 12 antennal segments, a scape, a pedicel, and 10 flagellomeres). The males of all other ''Pepsis'' species possess 13 antennal segments. Younger females of ''P. grossa'' have long, coarse hairs beneath the femur of the front leg, but these can be worn off in older specimens.
Pepsis grossa (formerly formosa) or Tarantula Hawk Wasp Pepsis grossa (formerly formosa) or Tarantula Hawk Wasp
The female wasp usually attacks the tarantula in or near its ground burrow with a sting to its abdomen. When paralyzed, the wasp drags it back into the spider’s burrow and lays one egg on the spider, plugging the burrow opening. The Tarantula Wasp larvae feeds on the paralyzed living spider. Adult wasps feed on nectar and pollen.

Along with its aposematic coloration (red wings) and their dangerous stinger, considered to be the second most painful insect sting in the world, after that of the bullet ant, they have few predators. The roadrunner bird and the bullfrog are two of its few predators.

15 species of Pepsis wasps are found in the United States with 9 of those occurring in desert regions. In the deserts of Southwestern USA like Arizona where I live, two species of Tarantula Hawks are common, pepsis formosa and pepsis thisbe. These wasps can reach almost 2 inches in length. They are solitary wasps and not generally considered aggressive, but I have crossed their paths on hiking trips several times.
https://www.jungledragon.com/image/126006/pepsis_formosa_or_tarantula_hawk_wasp.html
https://www.jungledragon.com/image/126009/pepsis_formosa_or_trantual_hawk_wasp.html Fall,Geotagged,Pepsis grossa,United States

Distribution

This species is found from the southern United States of America as far north as Kansas through Mexico and Central America south to northern South America, including the Caribbean.
Pepsis formosa or Trantual Hawk Wasp https://www.jungledragon.com/image/126007/pepsis_formosa_or_trantual_hawk_wasp.html
https://www.jungledragon.com/image/126006/pepsis_formosa_or_tarantula_hawk_wasp.html
 Fall,Geotagged,Pepsis grossa,United States

Behavior

These wasps prey almost exclusively on tarantulas of the family Theraphosidae. In Texas, the preferred prey is ''Aphonopelma hentzi''. The female wasps hunt in a crepuscular pattern, avoiding the intense daytime sun, by flying low over the ground, detecting their prey using vision or scent, possibly detecting the occupied burrows by the scent of the silk curtain the spider weaves over the entrance. The females may also hunt on the ground, flicking her wings and antennae quite intensively.

Once a spider has been detected, the wasp uses its mandibles and carefully enters the spider's burrow. This seems to cause the spider to leave the burrow where the wasp and it can fight; the wasp has to evict the spider to ensure it has space to maneuver. Once the spider has been evicted, the wasp steps away from it and grooms itself before using its antennae to cause the spider to raise itself into a threat posture by raising its front legs and baring its fangs. The wasp then grabs the second legs and injects the spider with her sting between the base of the leg and the sternum, striking a nerve centre and causing paralysis in the spider. She may then feed on fluid exuding from the wound she has caused or she may groom herself again. The wasp may then drag the spider back into her burrow, or she may dig a new burrow, before laying a single egg on the spider and sealing the chamber.

The larva hatches from the egg and carefully consumes the paralysed spider, and when it is finished consuming the spider’s vital organs, the larva weaves a silken cocoon for itself. It then metamorphoses into a pupa before emerging as an adult wasp. When the female is choosing spiders, she selects the larger specimens, usually females, to lay fertilised eggs on and these produce female wasps, unfertilised eggs are laid on captured male spiders and these hatch into male wasps.

In Big Bend Ranch State Park, Texas, four species of plants accounted for 73.6% of all plants which were used by adults for feeding; these were the milkweeds: ''Asclepias texana'' and ''Asclepias sperryi''; Mexican buckeye ''Ungnadia speciosa'', and honey mesquite ''Prosopis glandulosa''. Wasps of the genus ''Pepsis'' do seem to be important pollinators of milkweeds which are regarded as noxious weeds, as they are poisonous to grazing livestock.

''P. grossa'' forms mixed-species, mixed-sex aggregations that appear to be defensive in nature and probably assist in the location of resources and mating opportunities.

Predators

These wasps are infrequently recorded as prey for other animals, with kingbirds and the greater roadrunner being recorded as preying on ''P. grossa''. The roadrunner beats the wasp against the ground before it eats it. Roadrunners have also been known to kleptoparasitise tarantula hawks, i.e., steal the spider from the wasp while otherwise leaving the wasp unharmed. The American bullfrog ''Lithobates catesbeianus'' has also been recorded preying on these wasps.

Defense

Wasps of the genera ''Pepsis'' and ''Hemipepsis'' produce large quantities of venom, and when stung, humans experience immediate, intense, excruciating short-term pain. Although the immediate pain of a tarantula hawk sting is among the greatest recorded for any stinging insect, the venom itself is not very toxic. The lethality of 65 mg/kg in mice for the venom of ''P. grossa'' reveals that the defensive value of the sting and the venom is based entirely upon pain. The pain experienced by the potential predator also forms an enabling basis for the evolution of aposematic coloration, aposematic odor, and a Müllerian mimicry complex involving most species of tarantula hawks as well as Batesian mimicry with other harmless insect species.

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Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionArthropoda
ClassInsecta
OrderHymenoptera
FamilyPompilidae
GenusPepsis
SpeciesP. grossa