﻿74 HYMENOPTERA 



nests (Fig. 29) of this Insect are often attached to the twigs of 

 shrubs, while those of the two species previously mentioned are 



usually placed on objects that offer a 

 large surface for fixing the foundations 

 to, such as walls. According to Goureau 

 the larva of this species forms in one 

 corner of its little abode, separated by a 

 partition, a sort of dust-heap in which 

 it accumulates the various debris re- 

 sulting from the consumption of its 

 stores. 



Eumenes con lea, according to Home, 

 constructs in Hindostan clay-nests with 

 A very delicate walls. This species pro- 



FlG. 29. — Nest of Eumenes • • -, , .,1 > , i 



coarctuta: a. the nest visions its nest with ten or twelve green 



attached to wood : B, de- caterpillars : on one occasion this ob- 

 tached, showing tin- larva. . ,. „ . , , 



«, the larva ; I, the parti- server took from one cell eight green 



tion of the cell. (After caterpillars and one black. It is much 



Andre.) . . 



attacked by parasites owing, it is 

 thought, to the delicacy of the walls of the cells, which are 

 easily pierced ; from one group of five cells two specimens only 

 of the Eumenes w T ere reared. 



Odynerus, with numerous sub-genera, the names of which 

 are often used as those of distinct genera, includes the larger 

 part of the solitary wasps ; it is very widely distributed over the 

 earth, and is represented by many peculiar species even in the 

 isolated Archipelago of Hawaii ; in Britain we have about fifteen 

 species of the genus. The Odynerus are less accomplished 

 architects than the species of Eumenes, and usually play the 

 more humble parts of adapters and repairers ; they live either in 

 holes in walls, or in posts or other woodwork, or in burrows in 

 the earth, or in stems of plants. Several species of the suit- 

 genus Hoplojpus have the remarkable habit of constructing 

 burrows in sandy ground, and forming at their entry a curvate, 

 freely projecting tube placed at right angles to the main bur- 

 row, and formed of the grains of sand brought out by the 

 Insect during excavation and cemented together. The habits of 

 one such species were described by Reaumur, of another by 

 Dufour ; and recently Fabre has added to the accounts of these 

 naturalists some important information drawn from his own 



