Essex Field Club on Facebook

Visit Our Centre

EFC Centre at Wat Tyler Country ParkOur centre is available for visits on a pre-booked basis on Wednesdays between 10am - 4pm. The Club’s activities and displays are also usually open to the public on the first Saturday of the month 11am - 4pm.

About us


Video about the Club Essex Field Club video

registered charity
no 1113963
HLF Logo A-Z Page Index

Species Account for Volucella zonaria

previous species | next species

Volucella zonaria  (Poda, 1761)
Diptera: Syrphidae: Syrphidae

Volucella zonaria - jme7183 Copyright: John Everett

 
Maps produced by MapMate®. Data overlays Copyright © Essex Field Club 2024.
Reproduction for study and non-profit use permitted, all other rights reserved.

Taxonomic group: hoverflies (Diptera: Syrphidae) - Available county data

Why not become a member

View time series maps for Volucella zonaria

Missing records?

member log-on for taxon report




Essex RDB: Listed
Threat: Regionally Important

Records: 294
First Record: 1953
Latest Record: 2024

1992-on hectads: 29
Pre-1992 hectads: 5
Total hectads: 30

Additional Phenology Data

Images

Volucella zonaria female 7
Volucella zonaria female 7
Volucella zonaria 6
Volucella zonaria 6
Volucella zonaria 5
Volucella zonaria 5
Volucella zonaria - jme7183
Volucella zonaria - jme7183
Volucella z. head
Volucella z. head
Volucella z.
Volucella z.

upload a new image


   
 
Please report any problems with this record:
VC error
GR error
Taxon ID suspect
Structural habitat suspect
Other problems, please explain here:


 

Essex Red Data List comment
Formerly a rare migrant species. This hoverfly established itself in Britain in the London area during the 1950s. Since then it has become fairly frequent in south Essex near to the Thames where it is often found in gardens. Nationally it is still scarce

Species text
This, our largest and most spectacular hoverfly, seems to be almost entirely anthropogenic in Britain. Its larvae are scavengers and predators in the nests of social wasps (including the hornet Vespa crabro), where they probably feed on larvae and pupae. It is usually seen visiting flowers in suburban areas where it occurs in parks and gardens. Many recent records come from civic amenity plantings around car-parks and urban roads (Ball & Morris, 2000). Until about 1940 it was regarded as a rare vagrant to the south coast of England, then, during the 1940s, it began to become established in the London area and is now quite frequent, especially in the outer suburbs and in northern Kent. Current evidence shows this species is expanding its range into Suffolk and Norfolk, and north and west from London into Hertfordshire and along the Thames valley (Stubbs & Falk, 2002). References

Species text last edited on Tue Mar 20th 2007 by user 3

Habitats

Broad Habitat Data (based on 50 records with habitat information)

Broad subhabitat Data (based on 2 records with subhabitat information)

Structural Habitat Data (based on 105 records with structural habitat information)

Habitat Detail and Method (based on 294 records with habitat detail and method information)

Recorded management for locations with Volucella zonaria

Recorded substrate and hydrology for locations with Volucella zonaria

Why not join the Club, register and add a new species page
Interpretation of distribution maps