This little beauty is Vespa mandarinia, up to two inches long with a three inch wingspan, and a quarter inch stinger. The latter injects venom so strong that it can dissolve human tissue, but they normally feed on honeybees; "Just one of these hornets can kill 40 European honeybees a minute; a handful of the creatures can slaughter 30,000 European honeybees within hours, leaving a trail of severed insect heads and limbs." More here and here. There's another pic below the fold.
(Hat tip to Ocellated)
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That's a beauty, all right. But there's no way I'd handle one of those critters with bare hands. I'd need gloves and clothes and a mask at least... quarter inch stinger, did you say?... yeah, a couple of inches thick should do it.
Hey! I've SEEN ONE! :D
1991, South Korea with the World Scout Jambouree. It was about the size of my thumb. Beautiful thing too. Was pretty docile, until one of the local girls running a gift-stand tried to kill it with a ruler.
Truly impressive indeed - I saw the National Geographic show on Giant Wasps a couple weeks ago, complete with a full segment of one slicing honey bees to shreds, at a rate of about one a second.
Nicholas Demers wrote:
But there's no way I'd handle one of those critters with bare hands.
You should check out this video. (The hornet depicted isn't V. mandarinia, but a closely related species.)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HuMS3KDNysM
O.K., I know this is a stretch, but there's been a discovery of "Orthoptera-ian proportions" made here in Arizona. http://www.livescience.com/animalworld/060505_cricket_genus.html
New Genus of Cricket Found in Arizona Cave
By Robert Roy Britt
LiveScience Managing Editor
posted: 05 May 2006
04:31 pm ET
In a rare type of discovery, researchers have identified a whole new genus of cricket in caves in Grand Canyon-Parashant National Monument in northwestern Arizona.
The discovery was made by Northern Arizona University doctoral candidate J. Judson Wynne and National Park Service researcher Kyle Voyles.
The new genus has yet to be named. It was identified by cricket expert Theodore Cohn of San Diego State University.
What's different
Most crickets have a pair of non-clasping cerci at their hind ends. Earwigs have cerci, which are commonly known as pinchers. The newfound genus has cerci that do clasp, Wynne said in a telephone interview.
The plate that covers its reproductive zone is also unlike any known on other crickets, he said.
Cave crickets tend to sleep and reproduce in the cave but go outside to feed at night. It is not known if the newfound critters live that way, but Wynne suspects they do, having found them during the day near the cave entrance in semi-darkness.
"I don't think there's enough food there to support the crickets," he said. "I think they come out to feed."
Much to learn
The finding suggests there's a lot more to discover in Southwest caves.
Of more than 1,000 known caves in Arizona, only 3 percent have been significantly surveyed by biologists.
"Cave ecosystems are one of the most poorly understood and fragile ecosystems," Wynne said. "The discovery of a new cricket genus from a northwestern Arizona cave emphasizes how little is known about these ecosystems."
A genus is a major subdivision within a family of living things that typically includes more than one species. The newfound crickets belong to the Rhaphidophoridae family, which is within the order called Orthoptera. This order also includes grasshoppers.
Neil Cobb, curator of the Colorado Plateau Museum of Arthropod Biodiversity, said the discovery of a new genus in such a well-known order in North America is rare.
"Caves are one of the final frontiers in temperate regions for discovering new taxa," Cobb said today. "Because caves are extreme environments, cave arthropods are very specialized and possibly endemic to a single cave system or region. They present interesting and odd evolutionary forms that reflect the extreme environments found in caves."