By Don Pinnock• 27 January 2021
The fig wasp. (Image Sergio Jansen Gonzalez, CC BY-NC)
It’s said that if you lift up the corner of anything, you’ll find it’s hitched to the rest of the universe. As mutual dependence goes, though, you’ll seldom find a closer – or odder – relationship than between a fig tree and its personal wasp.
There were chimpanzees all over the fig tree like fat brown fruit ripe for the picking. They were eating, arguing, posturing, playing and one couple, unconcerned by a cluster of admiring youngsters, were having sex.
Bits of discarded fig and the occasional scat or stream of pee were raining down. Given the massive spread of the tree’s branches and the closeness of the surrounding forest, it was hard both to see the chimps and avoid being splodged.
I had hiked to the huge fig tree at the heart of the Kibale Forest in Uganda with a guide and a small group of primate enthusiasts. We stared at the Pan troglodyte performance for a while, as one would, but I gradually became aware of the sideshows – countless birds and periodic raids by nervous red-tailed monkeys. The tree was aswarm with life. Down below, the ground was covered in rotting, marinating figs and buzzing with all manner of intoxicated insects. After the silent, confidential forest, it was like entering a supermarket with a summer sale on.
Fig tree
There’s just something about fig trees that, like baobabs, sets them apart. Strangler figs spiralling their way up forest giants and looking like Jack’s beanstalk, rock figs clawing their way up cliff faces and here, a Zanzibar fig, crawling with chimps. They have presence.
Because they fruit all year round, fig trees – all 750 species of them – are the very foundations of tropical and subtropical life. They’re more than mere trees: they’re entire ecosystems.
Depending on its size and type, a tree can yield up to 100,000 figs twice a year (we’re talking tonnage here) and each fruit can contain up to 1,000 tiny seeds. This makes for some serious eating by an extraordinary range of creatures.
South African naturalist Duncan Butchart, who staked out a large Stuhlmann’s fig in Maputaland, ticked off 16 trumpeter hornbills, 10 African green pigeons, eight purple-crested louries, eight white-eared barbets, seven black-bellied starlings, six speckled mousebirds, six yellow white-eyes, four black-eyed bulbuls, two black-collared barbets, a golden-rumped tinkerbird and a solitary sombre greenbul, all of which visited the tree within 30 minutes. This definitely beat counting partridges in a pear tree.
But that hardly scratches the surface of fig-tree society. While the parrot-like green pigeons are the standard rent-a-crowd in fruiting figs, you will invariably also find several species of lourie and hornbill. Patient observation might also turn up African pygmy geese, white-backed ducks, twinspots, canaries, fire finches, francolins, guineafowls, geckos, agamas, arboreal snakes, tree frogs, dragonflies, wasps, damselflies, fig tree moths, spiders, ants, termites and the beautiful fig-tree blue butterfly.
Then, depending on the tree’s location, there are fruit bats (Wahlberg’s and Peters’s epauletted, straw-coloured and Egyptian), samango and vervet monkeys, galagos, baboons, chimps, gorillas and, of course, humans.
At ground level you may find elephants, several species of duiker, bushpigs, African civets, dassies, squirrels, mice and other rodents, tortoises (which love munching fermenting fruit) and, if the tree overhangs water, banded tilapia and silver catfish which snap up floating fruit. Under the mulch and fallen figs are no end of sap-sucking beetles, weevils, slugs and bugs.
I guess you get the picture. But here’s the amazing bit.
At the base of this extraordinary balancing act of interdependence is a creature the size of the head of a pin and a fraction of its weight: the fig wasp of the family Agaonidae. Each of the hundreds of Ficus species has its own, private and personal pollinating wasp. Without the wasp, the only evidence of the genus Ficus would be in coal or fossil deposits, but without a fig, the wasp is but a faint memory.
Illustration Iziko Museums of Cape Town
The fig wasp is involved with figs the way fish are involved with the sea: they live and have their meaning within its enfoldment. It’s one of the most extraordinary examples of co-evolution. In fact, it has been suggested that the tree and the insect have co-speciated: when new species of fig evolved, the wasp evolved to pace its needs.
If you’ve ever eaten a fig you’ll know that it’s an enclosed sphere which, when you break open, contains what looks like a deep-pile carpet of edible stuff. The ‘pile’ is not flesh but flowers, hundreds of them. To breed, the tiny female wasps have to squeeze their way through a tightly closed opening (the ostiole) at the apex of the fig to get into this sphere and to do this they have developed what entomologist Simon van Noort of Iziko Museums in Cape Town described to me as “quite bizarre morphology”. On his desk was a display case of several hundred wasps and a microscope. “This is the only way you can appreciate them,” he commented as he adjusted the scope’s focus.
Suitably magnified, the wasp certainly was bizarre – but beautiful. She had an elongated head and a flattened thorax, delicate mandibles and backwards-pointing teeth to prevent her slipping backwards while boring, a few teeth on her legs for good measure and two delicate, fan-like antennae. With this equipment, she has to squeeze and labour her way into the fruit before some predator comes along.
“It’s tough getting into a fig if you’re the pollinator,” Simon observed. “Her wings and antennae usually break off. But she doesn’t need them once she’s inside.”
Within the protective fruit, which seals the hole she’s made, the wasp lays her eggs in some of the flowers and pollinates others with pollen she’s conveniently stuffed into pockets on her legs or which has stuck to her body. Then, in her tomb blossom, she dies. A lifespan of but a few days.
When her offspring are mature they hatch into the enclosed world of the fig. The generally wingless males – runty little things – have what from a non-wasp perspective seems a short, unenviable life measured in mere hours. They chew holes in the galls containing the young females, mate, dig exit tunnels through the fig wall from which the females escape, then die.
The females see a bit more of the world. Some trees have figs that perform both the male (pollen production) and female (seed production) functions, but others – around half of all figs – have separate male and female trees. In this case, the female trees produce figs that have only seeds and the male trees figs that produce only wasps (you may be relieved to know that the edible fig we enjoy comes from only a female tree.)
Once the female wasps have left the fig, the fruit ripens, changes colour and smell and becomes attractive to fruit-eating creatures which dutifully disperse the seeds.
For a tiny wasp on a mission, finding the right fig is solved by the tree, which emits a perfume cocktail attractive to only that special wasp which pollinates it. Just to make it more challenging, the tree remains receptive to wasps for just a few days, but it makes sure it presents its pollen on exactly the day the adults emerge from the fig.
It can be pretty rough outside the protective fruit, which may explain why the males stay put. As the females emerge, ants, birds, geckos and even flies snap them up. But, luckily, the fig only ripens after the wasps have left and so fruit-eaters don’t chomp the pollinators of the next fig crop.
Once out, the females sniff their way up the scented trail, regularly clocking up to 10 kilometres. The record, though, presently stands at 450 kilometres, clocked between KwaZulu-Natal and Grahamstown in the Eastern Cape – and this is an insect around a millimetre long. You try to figure that one out.
So the wasp locates a fig to ensure the continuation of her species, and the tree makes sure that its pollen reaches future generations by the only way that it can – in the knee pockets of a near-microscopic insect. Neither could survive without the other.
You might wonder how the tree got this orchestration just right. Recent research suggests that fig trees and wasps have been refining their mutualism for around 90 million years. If the wasps fail to find their goal and pollination doesn’t take place, a tree (almost as an act of chagrin) will commonly abort its entire crop.
Just in case you think that’s the end of the story, you need to know there are hundreds of species of parasitic, non-pollinating fig wasps that the tree does its best to ignore and countless mites and nematode worms that live in the figs and travel and propagate by way of fig wasps. There are layers upon layers of mutualism and co-evolution out there which we’re only beginning to get a handle on. A British mathematician, Augustus de Morgan, seemed to get it right when, after puzzling over life’s interconnections, wrote:
“Great fleas have little fleas upon their backs to bite ’em,
And little fleas have lesser fleas, and so ad infinitum,
And the great fleas themselves, in turn, have greater fleas to go on,
While these again have greater still, and greater still, and so on.”
I’d love to know what he’d think about fig wasps and that tree full of chimps in Uganda. Probably he’d nod and say: “Just so.” DM/ ML
https://youtu.be/8fpKDtLjvaI
https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/article ... res-a-fig/
The wasp
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Re: The wasp that cares a fig
"Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world." Nelson Mandela
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The desire for equality must never exceed the demands of knowledge
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Re: The wasp that cares a fig
Fascinating
Next trip to the bush??
Let me think......................
Let me think......................
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Re: The wasp that cares a fig
Very interesting indeed!
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Re: The wasp
Invasive wasps threaten South African ecosystems: what the public can do to help stop the spread
July 22, 2024 - Ruan Veldtman, Senior Scientist at SANBI, Stellenbosch University
An Asian hornet invasion would be disastrous for South Africa. Ivan Vieito Garcia
The sight of a swarm of wasps, or even just a single wasp, strikes fear into many people’s hearts. Most wasp species aren’t dangerous to humans (unless you’re allergic), but their stings are painful.
Some wasp species can wreak havoc in other ways, though. Take the family Vespidae, which includes more than 5,000 species. Of those, about 700 are social wasps, meaning they live in groups, with nests containing anywhere between 25 and 7,000 wasps.
Sometimes social wasps are able to reach countries beyond their natural range and establish populations there. This usually happens when hibernating queens accidentally travel as stowaways, having chosen a safe spot (like a golf bag) to hide in through the winter.
It doesn’t take much to start a colony in a new place: a male drone mating with a single queen can produce a founding colony that can sire more than 9,000 offspring over a season and hundreds of new queens that can build their own nests the following season.
This can have dire ecological and socio-economic impacts.
In Argentina, for example, wasps that arrived from Europe in the 1970s cause millions of US dollars in damage every year. These wasps complicate agricultural activities, damage fruit in certain situations, and cause declines in honey bees and other beneficial insects and the ecosystem services they provide.
I am an ecological entomologist in South Africa who studies the effects of biological invasions. With my colleagues at the South African National Biodiversity Institute and Stellenbosch University, I’m working to monitor the country’s existing invasive social wasp populations and prevent them spreading. This is no simple task because there are not enough invasion biologists and funds to monitor all the threats.
That’s why we’re now turning to citizen scientists for help. With the help of the general public we believe we can keep the potential threat of spreading wasp populations under control.
Current invaders
There are two invasive social wasp species in South Africa. The German wasp (Vespula germanica) is both a generalist predator of insects (mostly flies) and a scavenger. If yellow wasps with black antennae descend on your picnic, trying to steal meat off your plate, you’re dealing with a German wasp. They mostly form nests underground but can nest in vents and holes in buildings.
A Vespula germanica queen. Simon van Noort, Author provided
The European paper wasp (Polistes dominula) always nests above ground. There are far fewer workers per nest and you can tell them apart from Vespula germanica by their orange antennae and the fact that they fly with their legs hanging. Vespula germanica tuck their legs in during flight.
Both species are limited to a small but populated part of the Western Cape province, mainly the greater Cape Town area. Worryingly, the German wasp was recorded in the Cederberg (about 240km from Cape Town) for the first time in 2024. This means the species is on the move after quite a slow start in South Africa.
A European paper wasp. Ernie Cooper
The German wasp population was first established in Cape Town’s Kirstenbosch botanical gardens in 1972, followed by a second wave of invasion in 2001. The European paper wasp was first detected in Kuilsrivier in 2008. It has since established populations in Porterville to the north of Cape Town and Hermanus to the east. Both species are thought to have been accidentally transported by either ship or plane.
It is prohibitively expensive to eradicate these species because they’ve become so entrenched in these ecosystems. The good news is that they haven’t jumped to another province – yet. But we’re not sure how long that will remain the case.
Honey bees at risk
Today, people are directly and indirectly making habitats better for social wasp invasions. We do this by providing them, unknowingly, with transport to new destinations. In our connected world there are countless opportunities for invasions to occur.
South African researchers are especially worried about the Asian hornet (Vespa velutina). It arrived in France, most likely in a shipment of goods imported from east Asia, in 2004 and has since spread to large parts of western Europe, forming a multitude of nests in densely populated areas. The species hunts honey bees and has caused major damage to apiaries.
South Africa is home to anywhere between 1 million (conservative estimates) and 10 million wild honey bee colonies, in addition to a formal and vibrant beekeeping industry. An invasion by the Asian hornet would be disastrous because it is a specialist predator of honey bees. (The German wasp also sometimes targets honey bee hives.)
The Asian hornet is a big wasp. Workers and queens range from 2.5cm to 3.5cm, resulting in higher volumes of venom being injected during a painful sting. They build their nests in trees, making them dangerous and cumbersome to destroy: if nests are not carefully destroyed the wasps go into a frenzy and attack any perceived threat in their vicinity.
So, how can the public help?
Citizen science
If you live in the Western Cape (or anywhere in South Africa) and have a smartphone with a GPS and a camera, you’re all set. By photographing any wasps you see and uploading them to citizen science platforms like iNaturalist, you can help scientists track species. Evidence has shown how valuable such platforms are for biodiversity research.
A good picture of a social wasp should be from the top, on normal camera setting about half a metre to a metre from the insect (or a bit further if photographing a wasp nest). Move slowly. Wasps collecting food aren’t usually a stinging risk because they are too focused on getting a meal back to the nest as quickly as possible. Even pictures of dead wasps on your windowsill or in a light cover can be useful if you post them. Don’t forget to add the date and a GPS pin.
Pictures can allow experts to confirm the identity of the species, which can then be used to research the distributions and new geographic records of potentially invasive species.
July 22, 2024 - Ruan Veldtman, Senior Scientist at SANBI, Stellenbosch University
An Asian hornet invasion would be disastrous for South Africa. Ivan Vieito Garcia
The sight of a swarm of wasps, or even just a single wasp, strikes fear into many people’s hearts. Most wasp species aren’t dangerous to humans (unless you’re allergic), but their stings are painful.
Some wasp species can wreak havoc in other ways, though. Take the family Vespidae, which includes more than 5,000 species. Of those, about 700 are social wasps, meaning they live in groups, with nests containing anywhere between 25 and 7,000 wasps.
Sometimes social wasps are able to reach countries beyond their natural range and establish populations there. This usually happens when hibernating queens accidentally travel as stowaways, having chosen a safe spot (like a golf bag) to hide in through the winter.
It doesn’t take much to start a colony in a new place: a male drone mating with a single queen can produce a founding colony that can sire more than 9,000 offspring over a season and hundreds of new queens that can build their own nests the following season.
This can have dire ecological and socio-economic impacts.
In Argentina, for example, wasps that arrived from Europe in the 1970s cause millions of US dollars in damage every year. These wasps complicate agricultural activities, damage fruit in certain situations, and cause declines in honey bees and other beneficial insects and the ecosystem services they provide.
I am an ecological entomologist in South Africa who studies the effects of biological invasions. With my colleagues at the South African National Biodiversity Institute and Stellenbosch University, I’m working to monitor the country’s existing invasive social wasp populations and prevent them spreading. This is no simple task because there are not enough invasion biologists and funds to monitor all the threats.
That’s why we’re now turning to citizen scientists for help. With the help of the general public we believe we can keep the potential threat of spreading wasp populations under control.
Current invaders
There are two invasive social wasp species in South Africa. The German wasp (Vespula germanica) is both a generalist predator of insects (mostly flies) and a scavenger. If yellow wasps with black antennae descend on your picnic, trying to steal meat off your plate, you’re dealing with a German wasp. They mostly form nests underground but can nest in vents and holes in buildings.
A Vespula germanica queen. Simon van Noort, Author provided
The European paper wasp (Polistes dominula) always nests above ground. There are far fewer workers per nest and you can tell them apart from Vespula germanica by their orange antennae and the fact that they fly with their legs hanging. Vespula germanica tuck their legs in during flight.
Both species are limited to a small but populated part of the Western Cape province, mainly the greater Cape Town area. Worryingly, the German wasp was recorded in the Cederberg (about 240km from Cape Town) for the first time in 2024. This means the species is on the move after quite a slow start in South Africa.
A European paper wasp. Ernie Cooper
The German wasp population was first established in Cape Town’s Kirstenbosch botanical gardens in 1972, followed by a second wave of invasion in 2001. The European paper wasp was first detected in Kuilsrivier in 2008. It has since established populations in Porterville to the north of Cape Town and Hermanus to the east. Both species are thought to have been accidentally transported by either ship or plane.
It is prohibitively expensive to eradicate these species because they’ve become so entrenched in these ecosystems. The good news is that they haven’t jumped to another province – yet. But we’re not sure how long that will remain the case.
Honey bees at risk
Today, people are directly and indirectly making habitats better for social wasp invasions. We do this by providing them, unknowingly, with transport to new destinations. In our connected world there are countless opportunities for invasions to occur.
South African researchers are especially worried about the Asian hornet (Vespa velutina). It arrived in France, most likely in a shipment of goods imported from east Asia, in 2004 and has since spread to large parts of western Europe, forming a multitude of nests in densely populated areas. The species hunts honey bees and has caused major damage to apiaries.
South Africa is home to anywhere between 1 million (conservative estimates) and 10 million wild honey bee colonies, in addition to a formal and vibrant beekeeping industry. An invasion by the Asian hornet would be disastrous because it is a specialist predator of honey bees. (The German wasp also sometimes targets honey bee hives.)
The Asian hornet is a big wasp. Workers and queens range from 2.5cm to 3.5cm, resulting in higher volumes of venom being injected during a painful sting. They build their nests in trees, making them dangerous and cumbersome to destroy: if nests are not carefully destroyed the wasps go into a frenzy and attack any perceived threat in their vicinity.
So, how can the public help?
Citizen science
If you live in the Western Cape (or anywhere in South Africa) and have a smartphone with a GPS and a camera, you’re all set. By photographing any wasps you see and uploading them to citizen science platforms like iNaturalist, you can help scientists track species. Evidence has shown how valuable such platforms are for biodiversity research.
A good picture of a social wasp should be from the top, on normal camera setting about half a metre to a metre from the insect (or a bit further if photographing a wasp nest). Move slowly. Wasps collecting food aren’t usually a stinging risk because they are too focused on getting a meal back to the nest as quickly as possible. Even pictures of dead wasps on your windowsill or in a light cover can be useful if you post them. Don’t forget to add the date and a GPS pin.
Pictures can allow experts to confirm the identity of the species, which can then be used to research the distributions and new geographic records of potentially invasive species.
"Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world." Nelson Mandela
The desire for equality must never exceed the demands of knowledge
The desire for equality must never exceed the demands of knowledge
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Re: The wasp
It never ends!
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Re: The wasp
It only gets worse
"Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world." Nelson Mandela
The desire for equality must never exceed the demands of knowledge
The desire for equality must never exceed the demands of knowledge