<h2 id="chapter-8"><ANTIMG src="images/i_093.jpg" alt="" /><br/> CHAPTER VIII<br/> <span class="chapter-title">THE HAIRY SAND-WASPS</span></h2>
<p><span class="upper">A slender</span> waist, a slim shape; an abdomen
tapering very much at the upper part and
fastened to the body as though by a thread; black
raiment with a red sash across the belly: there you
have a short description of the burrowing Sand-Wasps,
who hunt Caterpillars.</p>
<p>The Sand-Wasps choose for their burrows a light
soil, easily tunneled, in which the sand is held together
with a little clay and lime. Edges of paths,
sunny banks where the grass is rather bare—these
are the favorite spots. In spring, quite early in
April, we see the Hairy Sand-Wasp there.</p>
<p>Its burrow is a straight up-and-down hole, like a
well, about as thick as a goose-quill and about two
inches deep. At the bottom is a solitary cell, to
hold the egg. The Sand-Wasp digs by herself,
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quietly, without hurrying, without any joyous enthusiasm.
As usual, the front feet serve as rakes
and the jaws do duty as mining-tools. When some
grain of sand is very hard to remove, you hear rising
from the well a sort of shrill grating sound made
by the quivering of the insect’s wings and of her
whole body. Every little while the Wasp appears
in the open with a load of dirt in her teeth, some
bit of gravel which she usually flies away with and
drops at a distance of a few inches, so as not to
litter the place.</p>
<p>Some of these grains the Sand-Wasp does not
treat as she does the rest. Instead of flying off and
dropping them far from the work yard, she removes
them on foot and lays them near her burrow. She
has a special use for them. When her home is dug,
she looks at this little heap of stones to see if there
is any there to suit her. If there is not, she explores
the neighborhood until she finds what she wants, a
small flat stone a little larger in diameter than the
mouth of her hole. She carries off this slab in her
jaws and lays it, as a temporary door, over the opening
of the burrow. To-morrow, when she comes
back from hunting, the Wasp will know how to find
her home, made safe by this heavy door; she will
bring back a paralyzed caterpillar, grasped by the
skin of its neck and dragged between her legs; she
will lift the slab, which looks exactly like the other
little stones around, and which she alone is able to
identify; she will let down the game to the bottom
of her well, lay her egg and close the house for good
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by sweeping into the hole all the rubbish, which she
has kept near by.</p>
<p>The Hairy Sand-Wasp hunts a particular sort of
prey, a kind of large Caterpillar called the Gray
Worm, which spends most of its time underground.
How does she then get hold of it? We shall see.
One day I was returning from a walk when I saw a
Hairy Sand-Wasp very busy at the foot of a tuft
of thyme. I at once lay down on the ground, close
to where she was working. My presence did not
frighten the Wasp; in fact, she came and settled on
my sleeve for a moment, decided that her visitor
was harmless, since he did not move, and returned
to her tuft of thyme. As an old stager, I knew what
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this tameness meant: the Wasp was too busy to
bother about me.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_095.jpg" alt="she came and settled on my sleeve for a moment" /></div>
<p>The insect scratched the ground at the foot of the
plant, where the root joined the stem, pulled up slender
grass rootlets and poked her head under the
little clods which she had lifted. She ran hurriedly
this way and that around the thyme, looking at every
crevice. She was not digging herself a burrow but
hunting the game hidden underground; she was like
a Dog trying to dig a Rabbit out of his hole.</p>
<p>Presently, excited by what was happening overhead,
a big Gray Worm made up his mind to leave
his lair and come up to the light of day. That settled
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him: the Wasp was on the spot at once, gripping
him by the skin of his neck and holding tight in spite
of his contortions. Perched on the monster’s back,
the Wasp bent her abdomen and deliberately, without
hurrying, like a clever surgeon, drove her lancet-sting
into the back surface of each of the victim’s
rings or segments, from the first to the last. Not
a ring was left without receiving a stab; all, whether
with legs or without, were dealt with in order, from
front to back.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_096.jpg" alt="a big Gray Worm made up his mind to leave his lair and come up to the light of day" /></div>
<p>The Wasp’s skill would make science turn green
with envy! She knows by instinct what man hardly
ever knows; she knows her victim’s nervous system
and exactly what nerve centers to strike to make
it motionless without killing it. Where does she
receive this knowledge? From the power that rules
the world, and guides the ignorant by the laws of
its inspiration.</p>
<p>I will tell you about another encounter of a Sand-Wasp
with a Gray Worm which I witnessed. It was
in May, when I detected a Sand-Wasp giving a last
sweep of the rake to her burrow, on the smooth,
hard path. She had paralyzed her Caterpillar, probably,
and left it a few yards away from the home
while she made ready the entrance. At last the cave
is pronounced spick and span, and the doorway
thought wide enough to admit the bulky prey. The
Sand-Wasp sets off in search of her captive.</p>
<p>She finds it easily. It is a Gray Worm, lying on
the ground: but, alas, the Ants have found it, too;
they have already invaded it. The Wasp now scorns
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it. She will not have anything to do with a Worm
which she must share with Ants. To drive them
away is impossible; for each one sent to the right-about,
ten would return to the attack. So the Wasp
seems to think; for she goes on with her hunting,
without indulging in useless strife.</p>
<p>She explores the soil within a radius of ten feet
from the nest, on foot, little by little, without hurrying;
she lashes the ground continually with her
antennæ curved like a bow. For nearly three hours,
in the heat of the sun, I watch her search. What
a difficult thing a Gray Worm is to find, for a Wasp
who needs it just at that moment!</p>
<p>It is no less difficult for man. I have a plan. I
wish to give the Wasp a Worm in order to see how
she paralyzes it.</p>
<p>Favier, my old soldier friend, is there, gardening.
I call out to him:</p>
<p>“Come here, quick; I want some Gray Worms!”</p>
<p>I explain the thing to him. He understands at
once and goes in search. He digs at the foot of the
lettuces, he scrapes among the strawberry-beds, he
inspects the iris-borders. I know his sharp eyes
and his intelligence; I have every confidence in him.
Meanwhile, time passes.</p>
<p>“Well, Favier? Where’s that Gray Worm?”</p>
<p>“I can’t find one, sir.”</p>
<p>“Bother! Then come to the rescue, you others!
Claire, Aglaé, all of you! Hurry up, hunt and
find!”</p>
<p>The whole family is put at work. All its members
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become very active. But nothing turns up: three
hours pass and not one of us has found the Caterpillar.</p>
<p>The Sand-Wasp does not find it either. I see her
hunting persistently in spots where the earth is
slightly cracked. She wears herself out in clearing-operations;
with a great effort she removes lumps of
earth the size of an apricot-stone. These spots are
soon given up, however. Then a suspicion comes to
me: perhaps the Gray Worm, foreseeing a gathering
storm, has dug its way lower down. The huntress
Wasp very well knows where it lies, but cannot get
it out from its deep hiding-place. Wherever the
Sand-Wasp scratches, there must a Gray Worm be;
she leaves the place only because she cannot dig deep
enough. It was very stupid of me not to have
thought of this earlier. Would such an experienced
huntress pay any attention to a place where there
is really nothing? What nonsense!</p>
<p>I make up my mind to help her. The insect, at
this moment, is digging a tilled and absolutely bare
spot. It leaves the place, as it has already done with
so many others. I myself continue the work, with
the blade of a knife. I do not find anything, either;
and I leave it. The insect comes back and again
begins to scratch at a certain part of my excavations.
I understand:</p>
<p>“Get out of that, you clumsy fellow!” the Wasp
seems to say. “I’ll show you where the thing lives!”</p>
<p>I dig at the spot she indicates and unearth a Gray
Worm. Well done, my clever Sand-Wasp! Did I
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not say that you would never have raked at an empty
burrow?</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_100.jpg" alt="I obtain a second Gray Worm" /></div>
<p>Following the same system, I obtain a second
Gray Worm, followed by a third and a fourth. The
digging is always done at bare spots that have been
turned by the pitchfork a few months earlier. There
is absolutely nothing to show the presence of the
Caterpillar from without. Well, Favier, Claire,
Aglaé, and the rest of you, what have you to say?
In three hours you have not been able to dig me up
a single Gray Worm, whereas this clever huntress
supplies me with as many as I want, once that I have
thought of coming to her assistance!</p>
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<h3>THE ATTACK</h3>
<p>I leave the Wasp her fifth Worm, which she unearths
with my help. I will tell in numbered paragraphs
the various acts of the gorgeous drama that
passes before my eyes. I am lying on the ground,
close to the slaughterer, and not one detail escapes
me.</p>
<p>1. The Sand-Wasp seizes the Caterpillar by the
back of the neck with the curved pincers of her jaws.
The Gray Worm struggles violently, rolling and unrolling
its body. The Wasp is quite unconcerned:
she stands aside and thus avoids the shocks. Her
sting strikes the Caterpillar at the joint between the
first ring and the head, in the middle of the under
side, at a spot where the skin is more delicate. This
is the most important blow, the one which will
master the Gray Worm and make it more easy to
handle.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_102.jpg" alt="" /> <p class="caption">“The gorgeous drama.”</p> </div>
<p>2. The Sand-Wasp now leaves her prey. She
flattens herself on the ground, with wild movements,
rolling on her side, twitching and dangling her limbs,
fluttering her wings, as though in danger of death.
I am afraid that the huntress has received a nasty
wound in the contest. I am overcome with emotion
at seeing the plucky Wasp finish so piteously. But
suddenly the Wasp recovers, smooths her wings,
curls her antennæ, and returns briskly to the attack.
What I had taken for the convulsions of approaching
death was the wild enthusiasm of victory. The
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Wasp was congratulating herself on the way she
had floored the enemy.</p>
<p>3. The Wasp grips the Caterpillar by the skin
of the back, a little lower than before, and pricks the
second ring, still on the under side. I then see her
gradually going back along the Gray Worm, each
time seizing the back a little lower down, clasping
it with the jaws, those wide pincers, and each time
driving the sting into the next ring. In this way
are wounded the first three rings, with the true legs;
the next two rings, which are legless; and the four
rings, with the pro-legs, which are not real legs, but
simply little protuberances. In all, nine stings. After
the first prick of the needle, the Gray Worm offers
but a feeble resistance.</p>
<p>4. Lastly, the Sand-Wasp, opening the forceps
of her jaws to their full width, seizes the Caterpillar’s
head and crunches it, squeezing it with a
series of leisurely movements, without creating a
wound. She pauses after each squeezing as if to
learn the effect produced; she stops, waits, and
begins again. This handling of the brain cannot be
carried too far, or the insect would die; and strange
to say, the Wasp does not wish to kill the Caterpillar.</p>
<p>The surgeon has finished. The poor patient, the
Worm, lies on the ground on its side, half doubled
up. It is motionless, lifeless, unable to resist when
the Wasp drags it to the burrow, unable to harm
the grub that is to feed upon it. This is the purpose
of the Wasp’s proceedings. She is procuring food for
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her babies, which are as yet non-existent. She will
drag the Caterpillar to her burrow and lay an egg
upon it. When the grub comes out of the egg, it will
have the Caterpillar to feed upon. But suppose this
Caterpillar were active? One movement of his body
would crush the egg against the wall of the cell. No,
the Caterpillar must be motionless; but it must not
be dead, for if it were, it would speedily decay and
be unfit eating for the fastidious little grub. The
Wasp, therefore, drives her poisoned sting into the
nerve-centers of every segment whose movement
could hurt the grub-baby. She does better than that.
The victim’s head is still unhurt, the jaws are at
work; they might easily, as the Caterpillar is
dragged to the burrow, grip some bit of straw in
the ground and stop progress. The Caterpillar,
therefore, must be rendered torpid, and the Wasp
does this by munching his head. She does not use
her sting on the brain, because that would kill the
Caterpillar; she merely squeezes it enough to make
the Caterpillar unconscious.</p>
<p>Though we admire the wonderful skill of the
Wasp, we cannot help feeling sorry for the victim,
the poor Gray Worm. If we were farmers, however,
we should not waste any pity on the Worm.
These Caterpillars are a dreadful scourge to agricultural
crops, as well as to garden produce. Curled
in their burrows by day, they climb to the surface
at night and gnaw the base or collar of plants. Everything
suits them: ornamental plants and edible plants
alike, flower-beds, market-gardens, and plants in
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fields. When a seedling withers without apparent
cause, draw it to you gently; and the dying plant will
come up, but maimed, cut from its root. The Gray
Worm has passed that way in the night; its greedy
jaws have cut the plant. It is as bad as the White
Worm, the grub of the Cockchafer. When it
swarms in a beet-country, the damage amounts to
millions. This is the terrible enemy against which
the Sand-Wasp comes to our aid. Let us not feel
too sorry for it!</p>
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