ChatterBank3 mins ago
A fly eating a spider ...could this be true?
7 Answers
The other night I was coming inside and on the step was a bee/wasp/fly . It was trapping a spider and proceded to eat it .THe insect was black and yellow and had reddish wings .
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The common wasp Vespula vulgaris are omnivores, during the early breeding cycle when raising grubs the predate on insects which they pulp and feed to the larvae. The larvae then excrete a sugary solution on which the adults feed. During the autumn when the breeding cycle has finished they aggressively seek sugar sources like fallen fruit and most of the confectionaries in our local bakers window. I new this but never really thought about it until I saw a wasp catch a daddy longlegs cut its wings and legs off and then flew off with the body.
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There are a wide variety of spider-eating wasps as well as flies known as robber flies, which are predators.
Most spider wasps won't actually eat the spider in front of you - they carry it off to feed it to their kids.
Banana - the basic difference between wasps & bees is that Wasps = predators and Bees = herbivores. Now you know.
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