Galling attack
Many wasps make galls in oak trees, and a single oak may have over seventy kinds of gall, each made by a different species. But the hard shell of the gall doesn't always succeed in defending the wasp larvae, because some gall wasps don't make their own galls. Instead the jewel wasp parasitises the galls made by other species. She drills into the gall with a special organ that has a zinc tip. Then she injects an egg directly into the larva inside. Her own larva will eat the resident and take over its home.
Duration:
This clip is from
Featured in...
麻豆社 Nature
Be captivated, informed and inspired by the world's wildlife.
More clips from Intimate Relations
-
Insect skyscraper
Duration: 02:41
-
Handy disguise
Duration: 03:19
-
Predator or prey?
Duration: 03:22
-
Hitchhiker
Duration: 01:19
More clips from Life in the Undergrowth
-
Tiny sounds—The Silk Spinners
Duration: 01:39
-
Capturing Insect aviation—Invasion of the Land
Duration: 01:47
-
Insect skyscraper—Intimate Relations
Duration: 02:41
-
Tiny sounds—The Silk Spinners
Duration: 01:40