Question:
What's the difference between a wasp and a dirtdauber?
Sm00+H Cr!m1n@L
2008-06-29 21:48:09 UTC
So there's a mud-looking patch with a hole by my back door, and the other day I saw what looked like a wasp fly into it, but my dad said it was a dirtdauber (if that's how you spell it). What's the difference between the two, because they both look the same.
Fourteen answers:
10penny
2008-06-29 21:57:02 UTC
Mud dauber (sometimes "dirt dauber," "dirt dobber," or "dirt diver" in the southern U.S.) is a name commonly applied to a number of wasps from either the family Sphecidae or Crabronidae that build their nests from mud. Mud dauber may refer to:



The organ pipe mud dauber, Trypoxylon politum (family Crabronidae)

The black and yellow mud dauber, Sceliphron caementarium (family Sphecidae)

The irridescent blue mud dauber, Chalybion californicum (family Sphecidae)

Mud daubers are long, slender wasps, the latter two species above with thread-like waists. The name of this wasp group comes from the nests that are made by the females, which consist of mud molded into place by the wasp's mandibles. There are three common species of mud daubers, each with distinctive coloring: the organ-pipe mud dauber (solid black coloring), the black and yellow mud dauber, and a stunning metallic-blue mud dauber with blue wings.



The organ-pipe mud dauber, as the name implies, builds nests in the shape of a cylindrical tube resembling an organ pipe or pan flute.



The black and yellow mud dauber's nest is composed of a series of cylindrical cells that are plastered over to form a smooth nest about the size of a lemon.



The metallic-blue mud dauber foregoes building a nest altogether and simply uses the abandoned nests of the other two species and preys primarily on black widow spiders.



Mud daubers are rarely aggressive.



Mud daubers pose a special risk to aircraft operation, as they are prone to nest in the small openings and tubes that comprise aircraft pitot-static systems. Their presence in these systems can disable or impair the function of the airspeed indicator, the altimeter, and/or the vertical speed indicator. It is thought that mud dauber wasps were ultimately responsible for the
2015-08-15 21:42:11 UTC
This Site Might Help You.



RE:

What's the difference between a wasp and a dirtdauber?

So there's a mud-looking patch with a hole by my back door, and the other day I saw what looked like a wasp fly into it, but my dad said it was a dirtdauber (if that's how you spell it). What's the difference between the two, because they both look the same.
?
2016-11-02 14:41:42 UTC
Dirt Diver Wasp
2016-03-20 04:28:44 UTC
There are many species of both bees and wasps. Bees are of the superfamily apoidea, while wasps are any insect in the order hymenoptera and suborder apocrita that is not a bee or an ant. The differences between bees and wasps include honey production (some bees make honey, but no wasps do), nest type (wasps generally make paper or mud nests, while bees make wax nests) and stinging ability (bees release their stinger when they sting and die afterwards, kind of a suicide attack, while wasps can sting over and over again).
Sinjari
2008-06-29 21:54:27 UTC
a 'dirtddauber' is a wasp. They will fly off and hunt for some unsuspecting prey (maybe a small catapiller) and will sting it and paralyze it. They will then fly back to their little hole in the ground, jam the morsel down the tunnel, lays eggs inside the helpless bug, then bury it. In a few weeks the eggs will then hatch inside the burried bug, and eat it (YUMMY!). hope that helps :)
dukefenton
2008-06-29 21:51:27 UTC
A 'dirtdauber' (more commonly called a mud dauber) is a type of solitary wasp. So really, it's both.
Cynthia LY
2008-06-29 21:56:24 UTC
It is a type of wasp.



A Dirt dauber also called a Mud dauber or dirt dobber, or dirt diver in the southern U.S.) is a name commonly applied to a number of wasps from either the family Sphecidae or Crabronidae that build their nests from mud.
Stefani_Irene
2008-06-29 21:52:42 UTC
http://www.chrisdoelle.com/archives/dauber655.jpg

dirt dauber(doober)



http://nicksagan.blogs.com/nick_sagan_online/images/2007/04/02/wasp.jpg

wasp



1 lives in the ground & the other lives in a comb.

=]
agirlofyourdreams
2008-06-29 21:51:53 UTC
it says that they both look alike, but a wasp stings, while the other doesnt
kristen
2008-06-29 21:51:32 UTC
dirtdaubers don't sting although they look like they could & wasps do sting.
debbie
2015-08-11 11:25:02 UTC
Dirtdaubers do sting. They don't attack you, but I laid my hand down on one, and it DID sting.
sugertae
2008-06-29 21:52:06 UTC
i think the wasp has wings and the dirtdauber dose not
?
2008-06-29 21:50:14 UTC
i know what a wasp is.... i know nothing about dirtdauber
betotron don
2008-06-29 21:52:11 UTC
nothing


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