Vespula
Vespula | |
---|---|
German wasp (Vespula germanica) | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Class: | Insecta |
Order: | Hymenoptera |
Family: | Vespidae |
Subfamily: | Vespinae |
Genus: | Vespula Thomson, 1869 |
Type species | |
Vespa austriaca | |
Species | |
23 species | |
Synonyms | |
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Vespula is a small genus of social wasps, widely distributed in the Northern Hemisphere. Along with members of their sister genus Dolichovespula, they are collectively known by the common name yellowjackets (or yellow jackets) in North America. Vespula species have a shorter oculomalar space (shown in the figure below right) and a more pronounced tendency to nest underground than Dolichovespula.
Notable species[]
- Two common European species, the German wasp (Vespula germanica) and the common wasp (Vespula vulgaris), have established in other countries: both species are now found in New Zealand, Australia and South America, while the former has also been introduced in North America, and the latter in southern Africa.
- The eastern yellowjacket (Vespula maculifrons) and western yellowjacket (Vespula pensylvanica) are native to North America.
Species[]
- Vespula acadica (Sladen, 1918) – forest yellowjacket[2]
- Vespula alascensis Packard, 1870 – common yellowjacket[2]
- (Sonan, 1929)
- Vespula atropilosa (Sladen, 1918) – prairie yellowjacket[2]
- Vespula austriaca (Panzer, 1799) – red cuckoo wasp
- Vespula consobrina (Saussure, 1854) – blackjacket[2]
- Vespula flaviceps (Smith, 1870)
- Vespula flavopilosa Jacobson, 1978 – downy yellowjacket[3][2]
- Vespula germanica (Fabricius, 1793) – German wasp, German yellowjacket[2]
- Eck, 1991
- Vespula infernalis (Saussure, 1854) – cuckoo yellowjacket[2]
- Birula, 1931
- (Buysson, 1904–05) – northern red-banded yellowjacket[2]
- Archer, 1981
- (Rad., 1887)
- Vespula maculifrons (Buysson, 1905) – eastern yellowjacket
- (Archer, 1981)
- (Buysson 1902)
- (Linnaeus, 1771) - oriental hornet
- Vespula pensylvanica (Saussure, 1857) – western yellowjacket[2]
- Vespula rufa (Linnaeus, 1758) – red wasp
- (Eck, 1998)
- (Ish., Yam., Wagn., 1980)
- Vespula squamosa (Drury, 1770) – southern yellowjacket
- (Smith, 1870)
- (Saussure, 1854) – California yellowjacket[2]
- Vespula vidua (Saussure, 1854)[2]
- Vespula vulgaris (Linnaeus, 1758) – common wasp
See also:
- Paravespula, a subgenus of Vespula
Venom[]
Mostly composed of , hyaluronidase, and phospholipase.[King et al 1983 1]
Immunology[]
There is a high degree of similarity between immunogenic fractions of different Vespulae.[King et al 1983 2]
References[]
- ^ James M. Carpenter & Jun-ichi Kojima (1997). "Checklist of the species in the subfamily Vespinae (Insecta: Hymenoptera: Vespidae)" (PDF). Natural History Bulletin of Ibaraki University. 1: 51–92.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Vespula, BugGuide
- ^ Jacobson, R. S.; Matthews, R. W.; Macdonald, J. F. (1978-05-15). "A Systematic Study of the Vespula vulgaris Group with a Description of a New Yellowjacket Species in Eastern North America (Hymenoptera: Vespidae)1". Annals of the Entomological Society of America. 71 (3): 299–312. doi:10.1093/aesa/71.3.299. ISSN 0013-8746.
- King, T.P.; Alagon, A.C.; Kuan, J.; Sobotka, A.K.; Lichtenstein, L.M. (1983). "Immunochemical studies of yellowjacket venom proteins". Molecular Immunology. Elsevier BV. 20 (3): 297–308. doi:10.1016/0161-5890(83)90069-x. ISSN 0161-5890.
- ^ p. 306, "Yellowjacket venom consists mainly of three proteins: antigen 5, hyaluronidase, and phospholipase."
- ^ a b p. 307, "The venom phospholipases isolated from the three species of yellowjackets in this report were found to be immunochemically indistinguishable from each other using sera from rabbits immunized with venom from a single species of yellowjacket. Similar findings were obtained with antigen 5."
- ^ a b p. 304, "Identical concentrations of phospholipase-specific antibodies were obtained with immunosorbents containing phospholipase from any of the three species of yellowjackets. This was also the case for antigen 5-specific antibodies. ... The above results indicate that antigen 5s as well as phospholipases from these three species of yellowjackets are antigenically indistinguishable. The findings were confirmed by immunodiffusion. Lines of identity were observed when antigen 5s, or phospholipases, from the three species of yellowjackets were tested with rabbit anti-serum specific for V. maculifrons venom (results not shown)."
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Categories:
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