Can You Be Fined For Emptying A Swimming...
Civil1 min ago
No best answer has yet been selected by Fern57. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Hello Fern, I love this Q' as it sent me scurrying through my books to hopefully find the answer. Great picture which always helps.
Now I think it may be a Sabre Wasp. Book says " Impressive insect easily recognized by its length alone. Black body liberally sprinkled with white blotches; the legs are mainly orange and the long antennae are black. It's found wherever conifers grow throughout the British Isles."
I would love to be able to post a picture from my book but not sure how it's done....still, if this is not your little beast someone else will come up with the right name.
Hi again Fern57,
I have received a reply from my entomological contact which goes along with what Cetti suggested - that it is some sort of parasitic wasp that lays its eggs in beetle larvae deep within wood. The 'aerials' are two halves of its egg-laying and wood-boring apparatus (the ovipositor). Here is his full reply:
"Do you have any other pictures of this insect, I have downloaded the attachment and run it through Photoshop 7 but I cannot get a clear enough picture to form an opinion as to species. The two abdominal aerials are part of the ovipositing mechanism, but I would need to see the whole insect more clearly before drawing any conclusions. The general appearance is like a parasitic wasp and the length of the ovipositing mechanism would indicate it is a species who's 'prey' is a wood boring larva, but that's about all I can say at present."
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