WHOAH! check this out

Mantidforum

Help Support Mantidforum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Pretty cool, but I'm fairly certain that those are wasps mimicking mantids, not mantids mimicking wasps. ;)

 
I believe those are Mantispidae, the mantis fly. Its a close relative of the lace wing. Mantispidae adults are predators while the larvae are parasitic. The larvae are known to parasitize spider eggs and bee/wasp larvae.

They are actually fairly common worldwide, but rarely noticed. I have found several by accident in Santa Fe New Mexico. That was a few years ago. I have not seen any since!

 
Hi

Yes, this is right, neither mantids nor wasps.

What I think is much more interisting is the fact that they offer different kinds of (Para)todoxodera (of course it's all dead, dryed speciemens), but they have expensive as well as cheap (Para)todoxodera. I guess that means that not all of them are so extremely rare??? :blink:

regards :eek:

 

Latest posts

Top