The post Evolution’s Darkest Trick: How Jewel Wasps Turn Prey Into Living Food appeared first on A-Z Animals. Imagine a predator that doesn’t just kill its prey, but performs a high-stakes “brain ...
Scientists discovered an ancient wasp species, Sirenobethylus charybdis, preserved in 99-million-year-old amber from Myanmar. The wasp's structure resembles a Venus flytrap, believed to have been used ...
In Greek mythology, the sea monster Charybdis swallowed and regurgitated large volumes of water, creating whirlpools powerful enough to drag passing ships to their doom. Ninety-nine million years ...
Tropical paper wasp colonies survive chaotic queen loss through "compensator" wasps that step up essential labor.
Imagine a predator that doesn’t just kill its prey, but performs a high-stakes “brain surgery” to turn it into a willing servant. Meet the jewel wasp (Ampulex compressa), a shimmering, emerald-hued ...