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Chalybion californicum, the common blue mud dauber of North America, is a metallic blue species of mud dauber wasp first described by Henri Louis Frédéric de Saussure in 1867.
17 lis 2022 · Learn about the blue mud dauber (Chalybion californicum) – its size, appearance, diet, habitat, range, nest building, life cycle, and does it sting.
Descriptors: bulbous abdomen; thin waist; metallic wings and body; shiny; irridescent; solitary. Characteristics, Scientific Name, Classification, Taxonomy, Territorial Claims, and pictures of the Common-Blue-Mud-Dauber-Wasp (North America)
Blue Mud Wasp (Chalybion californium). Photo by Johnny N. Dell, Bugwood.org. The Chalybion californicum is an impressive and beautiful wasp, which can be identified by its blue and black sheen, a narrow petiole (“waist” between thorax and abdomen) and its length of 10 to 23 millimeters.
Chalybion is a genus of blue mud dauber wasps in the family Sphecidae. Chalybion species nest in a wide range of natural and artificial cavities such as holes in wood, walls, plant stems, etc., where they typically provision their brood cells with paralyzed spiders.
The blue mud wasp, Chalybion californicum, occurs throughout North America, from southern Canada south to northern Mexico (O'Brien 1998). Biogeographic Regions; nearctic. native; Habitat. This species is found in many different habitat types, anywhere flowers, spiders, nest sites, and a little water may be found (O'Brien 1998). Terrestrial Biomes
22 lis 2023 · Identification. A large, active, blue-black wasp with irridescent blue wings. Frequents flowers for nectar and buildings for nest sites. Compare "Steel-Blue Cricket-hunter Wasp" Chlorion aerarium, which preys on crickets.