The Orussoidea, parasitic wood wasps, have retained a relatively ancestral form of ectoparasitism ofbuprestid beetles and siricid woodwasps... Little is known of the mode of action of the venom, if any, but late-instar larvae appear to feed on or in the host after it is dead.The phylogenetic relation of Orussidae within the order of hymenoptera seems to be: [Siricoidea + (Orussoidea + Apocrita)].source: J. B. Whitfield (1998) "PHYLOGENY AND EVOLUTION OF HOST-PARASITOID INTERACTIONS IN HYMENOPTERA", Annual Review of Entomology Vol. 43: 129-151Phylum: Arthropoda Subphylum: Hexapoda Blainville, 1816Class: Insecta (Insects, Insekten)Subclass: PterygotaInfraclass: Neoptera Martynov, 1923Order: Hymenoptera Linnaeus, 1758 - (bees, ants and wasps, Hautflgler)Suborder: Symphyta Gerstcker, 1867 (sawflies, Pflanzenwespen)Superfamily: OrussoideaFamily: Orussidae (parasitic plant wasps)Subfamily: OrussinaeGenus:
Orussus Latreille, 1796probably:
Orussus abietinus (Scopoli, 1763) more info:
bugguide.net/node/view/13615more info (German):
germany.hymis.eu/species&s=27705taxonomiacal info:
www.biolib.cz/en/taxonposition/id63003/Germany, Brandenburg, vic. Knigs-Wusterhausen: Forst Dubrow (Haus des Waldes), 15.05.2013, at 4:27pmIMG_3648