- Joined
- Apr 30, 2025
- Messages
- 17
Just thought I'd share some pictures of my setup and progress so far-- feel free to ask any questions or talk shop about your own setup. I don't believe any others have tried this species yet in captivity, but if they're near you, I think it's worth a try if you're at all interested. Time to nest initiation is low, and their light requirements seemingly aren't very high either. Their diapause also seems to be facultative, so in theory, it may be possible to raise nesting wasps year-round in the right circumstances.
I'm mostly relying on artificial lighting, the main light being a 175W metal halide bulb in a reptile dome fixture that I wired into a ballast. This bulb gives off about 14k lumens, with a decent proportion of this being the blue and near-UV spectrum. I also have two supplementary lights; a 200W LED high bay fixture, and a typical LED black light bulb for navigation and orientation of the wasps within the enclosure. From my experience, the violent and UVA spectrum emitted by a black light bulb helps improve wasp activity under artificial lights.
While the attention to lighting may seem disproportionate to some, it's been my experience that wasps, when kept indoors, suffer from malaise and inactivity to an extent not experienced by other more commonly kept insects. Roaches, mantises, ants and others will for the most part do fine with ambient lighting; such is not the case for wasps, who seem to be deeply affected by both light intensity and photoperiod.
Photoperiod for the wasps is controlled by a basic smart plug, which allows for the programming of schedules within an app to dictate on and off times for the lights.
For enclosures, I'm using off brand "repti-breeze" type screen cages from Amazon, which used to be much more expensive, but thankfully came down in price a bit over the years. I placed hides consisting of modified and cut cardboard boxes glued to the sides of the cage to serve as nesting areas, and provided cardboard platforms for food and water dishes on the sides of the cage as well, since the wasps are initially adverse to venturing downward in the enclosure.
Initially, a pulp source was supplied in the form of heavy cardstock that was soaked in water overnight to loosen the fibers to ease gathering for the wasps. However, the cardstock didn't seem desirable to them, and I ended up replacing it with chunks of weathered old wood boards, which the wasps took to quite quickly.
The initial six wasps were captured from 4/3-4/9, which were the first warm days of the year. They were placed 3 to an enclosure, although conflict between the wasps and the lack of initiation for two of the wasps (one in each) led me to releasing one of them, and putting the other in a small enclosure of her own lit with a simple daylight LED bulb. As of now, she hasn't shown much progress towards initiation, but I like her coloration, and in a way it's a test of a more minimalist waspkeeping setup.
Time to nest initiation was roughly about a week for most of the wasps; however, there is still one foundress who has not yet initiated a nest. All of the initiations were by lone wasps, with no cooperation between wasps, which I understand is normal for this species. The wasps initially did not show interest in initiating; the first sign of 'interest' in this instance was an appetite for protein supplied in the form of recently killed waxworms and red runner roaches. With a few days following the consumption of protein, the wasps developed an interest in pulp sources, which within a day led to nest initiation.
The interest in protein being a prerequisite for nest initiation is by no means universal, and in other species such as P. dominula, interest in protein was seen to only develop after nest initiation and during the appearance of larvae in the nest.
Here is the current state of three out of four of the nests; the fourth is within one of the cardboard hides that I didn't create outside access to.

I'm mostly relying on artificial lighting, the main light being a 175W metal halide bulb in a reptile dome fixture that I wired into a ballast. This bulb gives off about 14k lumens, with a decent proportion of this being the blue and near-UV spectrum. I also have two supplementary lights; a 200W LED high bay fixture, and a typical LED black light bulb for navigation and orientation of the wasps within the enclosure. From my experience, the violent and UVA spectrum emitted by a black light bulb helps improve wasp activity under artificial lights.
While the attention to lighting may seem disproportionate to some, it's been my experience that wasps, when kept indoors, suffer from malaise and inactivity to an extent not experienced by other more commonly kept insects. Roaches, mantises, ants and others will for the most part do fine with ambient lighting; such is not the case for wasps, who seem to be deeply affected by both light intensity and photoperiod.
Photoperiod for the wasps is controlled by a basic smart plug, which allows for the programming of schedules within an app to dictate on and off times for the lights.

For enclosures, I'm using off brand "repti-breeze" type screen cages from Amazon, which used to be much more expensive, but thankfully came down in price a bit over the years. I placed hides consisting of modified and cut cardboard boxes glued to the sides of the cage to serve as nesting areas, and provided cardboard platforms for food and water dishes on the sides of the cage as well, since the wasps are initially adverse to venturing downward in the enclosure.

Initially, a pulp source was supplied in the form of heavy cardstock that was soaked in water overnight to loosen the fibers to ease gathering for the wasps. However, the cardstock didn't seem desirable to them, and I ended up replacing it with chunks of weathered old wood boards, which the wasps took to quite quickly.

The initial six wasps were captured from 4/3-4/9, which were the first warm days of the year. They were placed 3 to an enclosure, although conflict between the wasps and the lack of initiation for two of the wasps (one in each) led me to releasing one of them, and putting the other in a small enclosure of her own lit with a simple daylight LED bulb. As of now, she hasn't shown much progress towards initiation, but I like her coloration, and in a way it's a test of a more minimalist waspkeeping setup.
Time to nest initiation was roughly about a week for most of the wasps; however, there is still one foundress who has not yet initiated a nest. All of the initiations were by lone wasps, with no cooperation between wasps, which I understand is normal for this species. The wasps initially did not show interest in initiating; the first sign of 'interest' in this instance was an appetite for protein supplied in the form of recently killed waxworms and red runner roaches. With a few days following the consumption of protein, the wasps developed an interest in pulp sources, which within a day led to nest initiation.

The interest in protein being a prerequisite for nest initiation is by no means universal, and in other species such as P. dominula, interest in protein was seen to only develop after nest initiation and during the appearance of larvae in the nest.
Here is the current state of three out of four of the nests; the fourth is within one of the cardboard hides that I didn't create outside access to.



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