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Rainbow Wasps in Renosterveld

Rainbow Cuckoo Wasp perched on a flower

Tucked away in the vibrant Cape Floral Kingdom of South Africa, Renosterveld is a little-known habitat that is brimming with endemic flowers and bulbs so rare that each remnant patch has its own tapestry of plants. Within the Overberg region’s golden ‘wheatbelt’, Overberg Renosterveld Conservation Trust (ORCT) is working to protect the last remaining 5% of this remarkable habitat and all the wildlife it supports, from insects to Aardvarks.

Dr Odette Curtis-Scott, ORCT CEO, shared with us her trip out into the veld and the extraordinary finds she came across in just a single day, with thanks to iNaturalist experts for assisting with identifying the insects.

“When I recently visited a small, 10-ha (24-acre) patch of Renosterveld near the town of Caledon— known locally as Swartberg— I did not expect to find much at all. Unlike some of the flashier vegetation types like leafy forests or vibrant fynbos heathlands, renosterveld shrublands peak during the spring, and so tend to look extremely drab and lifeless during the dry, hot, and windy summer of the Western Cape.

Renosterveld may look drab in the dry season, but it is teeming with hidden life. Credit: ORCT

The find of the day counts amongst my ‘finds of a lifetime’. It was the most beautiful invertebrate I have ever laid eyes on. Smaller than a Honeybee, with jewel-like, shimmering stripes in every colour of the rainbow, a little Rainbow Cuckoo Wasp (Chrysis mionii) appeared and took my breath away. In this dry, tiny remnant of renosterveld, surrounded by monoculture fields still barren after the previous harvest, this little visitor was a completely unexpected treat. The wasp nonchalantly spent an hour coming and going from the site, visiting flower after flower in the baking sun.

The Rainbow Cuckoo Wasp’s metallic body shimmers in the sunlight. Credit: Dr Odette Curtis-Scott, ORCT

The Cuckoo Wasp family is made up of more than 3000 different wasp species and is most abundant in the desert regions of the world. The beautiful family of insects all share the Latin name Chrysis as it means ‘gold embroidered dress’ after the metallic colouring seen in most species. These fascinating wasps also get their name from their Cuckoo-like nesting behaviour of laying their eggs in the nests of other insects and leaving their larvae to prey on the host nests egg once they hatch.

The Rainbow Cuckoo Wasp gets it’s name from it’s cuckoo-like behaviour of laying its eggs in the nests of other insects. Credit: Dr Odette Curtis Scott, ORCT

Cuckoo wasps are not uncommon in South Africa, but they are most active in the hottest, driest times, which coincide with what we have always considered the ‘deadest’ time to visit renosterveld. But no ecosystem is ever ‘dead’— its biodiversity is just less obvious or active. The lesson I learnt from my trip out into the veld is that renosterveld, even at its driest and least attractive times, still harbours exquisite, unfamiliar surprises, they just take more time to reveal themselves. With patience, one will eventually be rewarded with these incredible finds.”

You can support the protection of Renosterveld through our Buy an Acre programme. Read on to see the array of hidden biodiversity that was found in a single patch.

In the whole patch, only two species were still flowering: Crassula tetragona with its succulent leaves and tiny white clusters of flowerheads, and Metalasia acuta— an unassuming, spiky, grey-green shrub of the daisy family. Image: Metalasia acuta. Credit: Adriaan Grobler, iNaturalist, (CC)

It was as I walked past a cluster of Metalasia that I disturbed a flurry of what turned out to be the very attractive Heliotrope Moth (Utetheisia pulchella). Because they were so plentiful, I decided to sit next to one of the Metalasias and see if any other pollinators or their predators might come along. Credit: BT Wrenhill, iNaturalist (CC)

The world that revealed itself kept me glued to that spot for nearly two hours! To my luck— but not the moth’s— I found a Heliotrope being subdued by a ridiculously well-camouflaged Praying Mantis (Miomantis). Credit: Janey Taylor, iNaturalist (CC)

While photographing the mantis, a moving stick caught my eye and there was a pale-coloured, Short-horn Walkingstick (Parabacillus), so perfectly camouflaged in the light, yellowing vegetation. Credit: hsug1747, iNaturalist (CC)

As the insects grew used to my presence, more pollinators visited the flowers— some being more obliging for the camera than others. In the mix were several solitary bees and wasps, a few butterflies, a most interesting Bee Fly in the family with the lovely name of Bombylliidae. Image: a species in the Bee Fly family. Credit: Wendy McCrady, iNaturalist (CC)

A tiny Spectacular Crab Spider (Thomisus spectabilis) also made an appearance when a breeze blew her from her perch on top of a flower where she had been preparing a surprise attack on an unsuspecting pollinator; Crab Spiders can take on prey significantly larger than themselves and often prey on bees). Credit: Dave Walter, iNaturalist (CC)

Learn more about the Buy an Acre programme here

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