The Parasitic Wasp
- There is a parasitic wasp
- That preys upon a butterfly –
- But in its early larval stage –
- And one will live and one will die.
- And when these larva are quite young,
- And hid within their thistle nests,
- The wasp implants a waspen egg,
- Which soon will hatch and then infest.
- But unlike other parasites
- Which eat and cause their host’s demise,
- This larval wasp can’t pupate quite,
- So allows its host to pupatise.
- But changing in the chrysalid
- Is not to be a fair Lady,
- But instead there is a waspen hid –
- A thing you’d think could never be.
- And some this chrysalid’s eclose,
- And you expect a butterfly,
- Instead it’s like a magic show
- As a wasp consumes your eye.
- A wicked wasp for a comely cast
- Of color as the flowers nigh,
- And nature has a plan that’s vast –
- But sometimes though, I don’t know why.
- G. Kittell
2003
A few years ago I did raise (quite?) a few Painted Ladies from larvae I found on
thistle. Maybe 5/6 (~83%) were parasitized by wasps. But what fascinated me was
unlike the tachinid fly, which kills the larva/pupa and then drops down on a silk
thread, the pupae I collected turned dark and then, like magic, out came a wasp
from a painted lady pupa. In all cases I thought I was getting a viable butterfly.
-George