Luring hornets: Scientists unlock sex pheromone of notorious honey bee predator

Luring hornets: Scientists unlock sex pheromone of notorious honey bee predator
A Vespa velutina attacks an Asian honey bee. Credit: Ping Wen

Over the past decade, Asian hornets, predatory insects with a widespread and expanding population, have invaded parts of Europe and Korea. Vespa velutina has a growing reputation as a species that proliferates rapidly, preys on honey bees and poses risks to humans.

Now a biologist at the University of California San Diego and his colleagues in Asia have developed a solution for controlling Asian hornets derived from the insect's natural chemical mating instincts.

As reported in the Oct. 11 edition of Scientific Reports, UC San Diego's James Nieh and researchers at the Chinese Academy of Sciences and Yunnan Agricultural University have deciphered the sex pheromone of Vespa velutina. Further, they developed a method of controlling Asian hornets by luring males into traps baited with synthesized versions of the pheromones.

"We have successfully tested the key sex compounds of this species and the results show that males are highly attracted to them," said Nieh, a professor in UC San Diego's Division of Biological Sciences.

Nieh noted that recently Turkey and Balkan nations have been invaded by Asian hornets, with much of Western Europe at risk. A single can bite and kill hundreds of honey bees in its quest to obtain . European honey bees have not evolved with this deadly predator and have poor defenses. As a result, "the European economic impact is high," said Nieh, and "major colony losses have led some beekeepers to abandon apiculture."

Luring hornets: Scientists unlock sex pheromone of notorious honey bee predator
Males lured into glue trap with synthetic sex pheromone (dispensed onto the white paper strip shown in center). Credit: Ping Wen

Nieh noted that Asian hornets are difficult to control because their colonies can spread rapidly and their nests are difficult to find in non-urban areas. They pose dangers to humans with stings that are painful and, in rare cases, deadly.

Dwarf Asian honey bee defending itself from a giant hornet attacker. Credit: University of California - San Diego

Pheromones are chemical signals that transmit information between members of the same species. Sex pheromones play a key role in mating and the continued survival of the species. In the case of Asian hornets, which have limited vision, likely play a key role in long-distance attraction. The new research demonstrates a simple, reliable way to monitor and potentially reduce the populations of these invading insects.

Luring hornets: Scientists unlock sex pheromone of notorious honey bee predator
Paper coauthors Ping Wen (left) and Shi-hao Dong (right) study Asian hornets. Credit: James Nieh
Asian hornet attacking an Asian honey bee, Apis cerana

Journal information: Scientific Reports

Citation: Luring hornets: Scientists unlock sex pheromone of notorious honey bee predator (2017, October 12) retrieved 29 March 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2017-10-luring-hornets-scientists-sex-pheromone.html
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