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Vespula sulphurea (Saussure, 1854)California yellowjacket |
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![]() © Copyright Harsi Parker 2009 Vespula sulphurea, California Yellowjacket, female |
![]() © altered from Miller 1961by Grace Chen Vespula sulphurea, face |
![]() © altered from Miller 1961by Grace Chen Vespula sulphurea, queen abdomen |
![]() © altered from Miller 1961by Grace Chen Vespula sulphurea, male abdomen |
![]() © altered from Miller 1961by Grace Chen Vespula sulphurea, worker abdomen |
![]() © from Akre 1981 Vespula sulphurea, distribution |
![]() © Miller 1961 Vespula sulphurea, distribution |
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Akre, R.D., A. Greene, J.F. MacDonald, P.J. Landholt, and H.G. Davis. (1981). Yellowjackets
of North America, North of Mexico. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Washington, D.C. Handbook
#552. Vespula sulphurea (California yellowjacket) is restricted almost entirely to the Upper Sonoran fauna of California, but it also occurs in southern Oregon, western Nevada, southern Arizona, and northern Baja, Mexico (fig. 54; Bohart and Bechtel, 1957). Duncan (1939) mentioned three nests that he collected, and included several photographs of one. Based on the limited data available, V. sulphurea is a subterranean nester. One of the colonies collected by Duncan (1939) in early October 1930 was comprised of 134 workers, 6 new queens, and the foundress queen. The nest contained a few male pupae. Seven additional subterranean colonies have been collected in California by R. E. Wagner (Univ. of Calif., Riverside) (table 7). Three nests had three worker combs, two of these also had a single primary reproductive-cell comb. Partial reproductive combs are often placed wherever space is available in the nest, even adjacent to the first worker comb; however, no reproductive cells have been found on worker combs. “This species has a slightly shorter active season than V. atropilosa, the first workers appearing a week or so later and the last workers disappearing a couple of weeks before those of V. atropilosa” (R. E. Wagner, personal commun.). Workers of V. sulphurea are attracted to heptyl butyrate, but other aspects of their behavior are unreported. Members of this species are not very abundant, and workers have not been reported as picnic pests.
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