Habitat selection and nest construction behaviour in some Afrotropical species of Ammophila (Hymenoptera: Sphecidae)

Author: Weaving Alan  

Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd

ISSN: 1464-5262

Source: Journal of Natural History, Vol.23, Iss.4, 1989-07, pp. : 847-871

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Abstract

Nest construction behaviour and nest site selection are described for seven species of Afrotropical Ammophila . Four species were atypical in their nest siting. Ammophila beniniensis selected shaded sites in well vegetated habitats, A. vulcania selected small clumps of vegetation in otherwise open habitats. A. insignis nested in vertical banks, old animal burrows and caves. A. braunsi is unique amongst Ammophila in its use of abandoned burrows of other wasps in non-friable clay soils. A. ferrugineipes, A. dolichodera and A. dolichocephala nested mostly in open habitats. Methods of soil waste disposal, sealing of nests and their final coverage, differed interspecifically, in some cases intraspecifically, but often apparently in response to the habitat. Temperature conditions, affected by habitat, influenced the depth to which nests were dug by some species. A. insignis switched sites in response to seasonal changes in temperature regimes in vertical banks. The existence in particular species of both primitive and advanced aspects of nesting behaviour questions their use in assessing the evolutionary status of these species.