Arthropods Bees and wasps '' There are many lineages of
cuckoo bees, all of which lay their eggs in the nest cells of other
bees, often within the same family.
Bombus bohemicus, for example, parasitises several other species in its genus, including
B. terrestris,
B. lucorum, and
B. cryptarum. These are instances of
Emery's rule, named for the Italian entomologist
Carlo Emery, which asserts that
social parasites among insects, including kleptoparasites, tend to be closely related to their hosts. The largest
monophyletic lineage of kleptoparasitic bees is
Nomadinae (a subfamily of
Apidae), which comprises several hundred species in 35 genera. The
cuckoo wasps (Chrysididae) lay their eggs in the nests of
potter and
mud dauber wasps. Other families of
wasps have "cuckoo" species that parasitise related species, as for example
Polistes sulcifer, which parasitises a related species,
P. dominula. Numerous other wasp families have genera or larger lineages of which some or all members are kleptoparasitic (e.g., the genus
Ceropales in
Pompilidae and the tribe
Nyssonini in
Crabronidae). Others are dubbed kleptoparasitoids, namely
parasitoids that select hosts that have been parasitized by another female. Kleptoparasitoids may make use of the punctures made by previous parasitoids on their hosts; may follow the trails or traces left by parasitoids to locate hosts; or use hosts already weakened by other parasitoids. Especially the latter is referred to as pirate parasitism.
Flies '' sp. feeding on captured prey (
Tipulidae) of a spider (video, 1 m 44 s) fly (
Craticulina seriata) is a kleptoparasite of
sand wasps, depositing its larvae on the food reserved for the larvae of the wasp Some
true flies (Diptera) are kleptoparasites; the strategy is especially common in the subfamily
Miltogramminae of the family
Sarcophagidae. There are also some kleptoparasites in the
families Chloropidae and
Milichiidae. Some adult milichiids, for example, visit
spider webs where they scavenge on half-eaten
stink bugs. Others are associated with robber flies (
Asilidae), or
Crematogaster ants. Flies in the genus
Bengalia (
Calliphoridae) steal food and pupae transported by
ants and are often found beside their foraging trails.
Musca albina (
Muscidae) reportedly shows kleptoparasitic behaviour, laying eggs only in dung balls being interred by one of several co-occurring dung-rolling
scarab species.
Dung beetles Scarab dung beetles relocate large amounts of vertebrate dung, rolling balls of the material to their nests for their larvae to feed on. Several smaller species of dung beetle do not gather dung themselves but take it from the nests of larger species. For example, species of
Onthophagus enter dung-balls while
Scarabeus beetles are making them.
True bugs , Belgium) Many semiaquatic bugs (
Heteroptera) are kleptoparasitic on their own species. In one study, whenever the bug
Velia caprai (water cricket) took prey heavier than 7.9 mg, other bugs of the same species joined it and successfully ate parts of the prey.
Spiders on the web of Argiope pulchella'' Kleptoparasitic
spiders, which steal or feed on prey captured by other spiders, are known to occur in five families: •
Theridiidae (
Argyrodes species) •
Dictynidae (
Archaeodictyna ulova) •
Salticidae (species of
Portia and
Simaetha) •
Symphytognathidae (
Curimagua bayano) •
Mysmenidae (
Isela okuncana,
Isela inquilina, and
Mysmenopsis species).
Vertebrates Birds A few bird species are specialist kleptoparasites, while many others are opportunistic.
Skuas (including jaegers) and
frigatebirds rely heavily on chasing other seabirds to obtain food. Other species—including
raptors,
gulls,
terns,
coots, and some
ducks and
shorebirds—do so opportunistically. Among opportunists such as the
roseate tern, parent birds involved in kleptoparasitism are more successful in raising broods than non-kleptoparasitic individuals.
Bald eagles have been seen attacking smaller raptors, such as
ospreys, to steal fish from them. Among
passerine birds,
masked shrikes have been recorded stealing food from
wheatears, and
Eurasian blackbirds have been recorded stealing smashed
snails from other
thrushes. However, the amount of food obtained by kleptoparasitism in the
magnificent frigatebird may be marginal. Gulls are both perpetrators and victims of opportunistic kleptoparasitism, particularly during the breeding season. While the victim is most often another member of the same species, other (principally smaller) gulls and terns can also be targeted. In the
Americas, as
brown pelicans surface and empty the water from their bills, they sometimes have their food stolen by
Heermann's gulls and
laughing gulls, which lurk nearby and grab escaping food items.
Great black-backed gulls are skilled kleptoparasites, stealing from other gulls and from raptors. Several species of gull steal food from humans, for example takeaway food at seaside resorts. File:Western Gull chasing Elegant Tern.jpg|
Western gull (
Larus occidentalis) in pursuit of an
elegant tern (
Thalasseus elegans) File:Fight, lucha. (50206561093).jpg|
Black-headed gull (
Chroicocephalus ridibundus) attempting to steal a fish caught by a
common tern (
Sterna hirundo) File:Kleptoparasitism Great Cormorant.jpg|The flying
great cormorant (
Phalacrocorax carbo) has taken a fish from the one in the water.
Mammals The relationship between
spotted hyenas and
lions, in which each species steals the other's kills, is a form of kleptoparasitism. Human hunters may commonly take the remains of fresh kills from other carnivores, such as lions and
Eurasian lynx.
Risso's dolphins have been observed charging "head-on" at
sperm whales, causing them to open their mouths; it has been suggested that the observed harassment results in some
regurgitation, and that the food is then eaten by the Risso's dolphins. The behaviour is rare and may be opportunistic. Cheetah with impala kill.jpg|A
cheetah has killed an
impala (and eaten part of it), creating a target for kleptoparasitism. Hyenas at stolen impala kill.jpg|A little later, the
hyenas have driven off the cheetah and are feeding. == See also ==