If you look at the detail in the ghosty wasp, it’s clear that it’s just an edited image of a wasp pasted onto a fig
Comment on spoopy figs
unexposedhazard@discuss.tchncs.de 1 month ago
FYI they are very fucking small nowhere near as big as in this image. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fig_wasp
Prontomomo@lemmy.world 1 month ago
Jestzer@lemmy.world 1 month ago
I wonder where they got that image from…
The first result for a fig wasp in a search engine? Nah, that’d be too obvious!
SendMePhotos@lemmy.world 1 month ago
I went and looked that up on my own and I could’ve just clicked into the comments?!
unexposedhazard@discuss.tchncs.de 1 month ago
When i came to the post there were no comments to quell my worries so i had to check and share what i found :D
snooggums@piefed.world 1 month ago
10/10 would read again!
ignotum@lemmy.world 1 month ago
nowhere as big as in this image
Yeah when they’re alive, but everyone knows you grow larger when you become a ghost
Smoogs@lemmy.world 1 month ago
Yes however it’s a ghost wasp. It can take whatever phantom size it damn well pleases
wizzim@infosec.pub 1 month ago
This is interesting. Regarding a sentence:
Allow them to mature
Does it mean the figs cannot mature without the wasp ? Does it mean that each ripe fig has been visited by a wasp ?
flora_explora@beehaw.org 1 month ago
Yes exactly. They are both dependent on each other in that way.
And to add on to that, figs are super important food trees in the tropics, because they are the only trees that produce fruits all year around. (Because they have to, otherwise the fig wasp population couldn’t sustain itself.) So many animal species are also dependent on the steady food source of fig trees (btw most look very different from the common fig tree, Ficus carica).
SlurpingPus@lemmy.world 1 month ago
I mean, fruit with seeds is formed from a flower after pollination. It’s just that on the figs, the flower is apparently inside the unripe fruit.
SlurpingPus@lemmy.world 1 month ago
Not much of a life. Larvae can already be argued to be the main stage of life in many insects, as they get to chill around and munch on plants for ages, while adults have to fly somewhere, shag, lay eggs and croak. With these wasps, the adult male has it even more straightforward, and the female seems to not even get to enjoy the larval stage.
Zoomboingding@lemmy.world 1 month ago
King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard told me they were big though
SilverFlame@lemmy.world 5 weeks ago
What a cool band, I was the orchestra manager on their first stop of their Phantom Island Tour. Their drummer is a force of nature
Zoomboingding@lemmy.world 5 weeks ago
Hell yeah, it’s a goal of mine to catch a show
definitely_AI@feddit.online 1 month ago
Nature is so fucking WEEEEIRD
denaggels@feddit.org 1 month ago
Actually it’s not. This is 100% human fault. Fig trees and fig wasps from the same (natural) area do not have this problem. When (I believe California?) imported a ton of trees and wasps to cultivate giant fig farms, they just didn’t care that the wasps they got would die during pollination. It was a known issue, that just got ignored. Completely preventable.
definitely_AI@feddit.online 1 month ago
Nature is not weird? What that person described is not weird? It’s weird. You cannot convince me nature is not weird. Because nature is so fucking WEEEEEEIRDDDD
denaggels@feddit.org 1 month ago
Fair
protist@retrofed.com 1 month ago
You’re just plain wrong. Figs and fig wasps have been coevolving for millions of years, and this is just how these species of fig and wasp evolved. Lots of animals have evolved to die after they reproduce. This is nature and has nothing to do with commercial fig growers
TriplePlaid@wetshav.ing 1 month ago
What problem do you mean?
The blastophaga psenes wasps in Turkey die during pollination just like the blastophaga psenes wasps in California do.
Here is more information about how figs (and fig wasps) came to be cultivated in the US.
Poxlox@lemmy.world 5 weeks ago
Is this a joke???