Bembix rostrata ranges in distribution from Europe and the Mediterranean to Central Asia, and as far north as Denmark and Sweden.
Bembix rostrata (lat. Bembix rostrata)


Distribution

Characteristics
Bembix rostrata displays distinctive behaviour in front of its nest, digging its burrows with fast, synchronised movements of its forelegs. In addition, the insect can turn very rapidly about its own axis, the flapping of its wings as it does this producing a buzzing sound reminiscent of a gyroscope. Its size (15–24 mm or 0.59–0.94 in), striking yellow and black-striped abdomen and the labrum, extended into a narrow beak, are distinctive features.

Life History
Bembix rostrata goes through 4 general life stages: egg, larva, pupa, and adult. Adult females burrow nests into the sand and lay their eggs there. Once the eggs hatch, the new larvae continue their development in the nests that they were born in. Each individual grub develops in its own burrow, this reduces competition for development space and necessary nutrients. Adult B. rostrata gather prey and bring the food back for the developing grubs to
feed on. When the young reach the pupal stage, females dig another nest to lay more eggs.

Behaviour
Bembix rostrata forms colonies between a dozen and several hundred insects, where the females each construct a tube up to 20 cm (7.9 in) long containing a single brood cell. This is stocked with dozens of insects, predominantly large flies (Tabanidae, Syrphidae), which provide the larva with food for its two-week development to the imago stage. The female carefully re-seals the nest tube after each feeding. Because of this intensive maternal care, a female can
raise at most only eight larvae during the high summer. B. rostata is very faithful to its nest sites, often nesting in the same places year-on-year, even if these change over time and alternative habitats are available. The species has become rare due to loss of large open-sand surfaces in warm areas, such as in the sand dunes of the upper Rhine Graben. It is also the host for several parasitoids in families such as Bombyliidae,
Conopidae, and Mutillidae. A cuckoo wasp which specialises in B. rostrata is Parnopes grandior. The behaviour of B. rostrata led the famous naturalist Jean-Henri Fabre to conduct intensive studies of the species.

References
Evans, H. E. (1957). Studies on the comparative ethology of digger wasps of the genus Bembix. Ithaca: Comstock. p. 248 pp.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: publisher location (link) Guichard, K. M. (1989). "The genus Bembix (Hymenoptera: Sphecidae) in Arabia". Fauna of Saudi Arabia. 10: 134–151. Hemmingson, A. M. & Nielson, E. T. (1925). "Über die Lebensinstinkte der dänischen Bembix rostrata L.". Entomologiske Meddelelser (in German). 16: 14–127. Larsson, F. K. (1986). Increased nest density of the digger wasp
Bembix rostrata as a response to parasites and predators (Hymenoptera: Sphecidae), Entomol. Gener. 12:71-75.[1] Larsson, F. K. (1990). Female body size relationships with fecundity and egg size in two solitary species of fossorial Hymenoptera (Colletidae and Sphecidae). Entomol. Gener. 15:167-171.[2] Larsson, F. K. (1991). Some take it cool, some like it hot — A comparative study of male mate searching tactics in two species of hymenoptera (Colletidae and Sphecidae). J. Therm. Biol. 16:45-51.[3] Larsson, F. K. & Tengö
J. (1989). It is not always good to be large; some female fitness components in a temperate digger wasp, Bembix rostrata (Hymenoptera: Sphecidae) J Kansas Entomol Soc. 62:490–495.[4] “Sand Wasp - What’s That Bug?” Accessed December 1, 2020. https://www.whatsthatbug.com/2009/07/06/sand-wasp-5/. “Bembix Rostrata (Linnaeus, 1758) | BWARS.” Accessed December 6, 2020. https://www.bwars.com/wasp/crabronidae/nyssoninae/bembix-rostrata.
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