Title: Using Wasps to find
1Using Wasps to find Beetles
Biosurveillance
Philip Careless1,2, Steve Marshall1, Bruce Gill2
and Gard Otis1 (1) University of Guelph, (2)
Canadian Food Inspection Agency
2Whos Who
Bee vs. Wasp
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3Bee vs. Wasp
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- Bees are often covered with hairs and collect
pollen which they feed to their larva.
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4Bee vs. Wasp
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5Social Bees
Bee vs. Wasp
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Solitary Bees
6Bee vs. Wasp
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- Wasps can be very diverse in appearance but feed
their larva meat.
7Bee vs. Wasp
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- Like bees, some wasps are social. Nests contain
a queen and many sterile workers.
8- Most wasps are solitary. One female provisions
a nest on her own, without the help of other
wasps.
Bee vs. Wasp
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Thread-waist Wasp
9Mud Daubers
Bee vs. Wasp
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10Gold Digger
Bee vs. Wasp
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Cicada Killer
11Tachysphex
Bee vs. Wasp
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Cuckoo Wasp (Kleptoparasites)
12Bee vs. Wasp
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- Across its broad range the solitary wasp
Cerceris fumipennis preys on Buprestid Beetles
(Metallic Wood-boring Beetles). The wasp is
known to prey on 91 different species of adult
buprestid beetle.
13Bee vs. Wasp
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14Bee vs. Wasp
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- Nesting at locations with hard-packed sandy
soil, the wasp can be found from Ottawa down to
Pelee National Park. In the US it is known to
every state east of the Rocky Mountains.
15Bee vs. Wasp
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- A typical colony of 30 nests will collect
upwards of 90 buprestids in a single day.
16Bee vs. Wasp
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- By simply waiting at the burrow entrances a
human observer can quickly gain an understanding
of what types of buprestid beetles can be found
in the surrounding forests.
17Bee vs. Wasp
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- This wasp is so skilled at finding buprestids
that it has provided us with species previously
unknown to Canada.
18Bee vs. Wasp
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- The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA), like
the USDA, is working to understand and contain
the spread of Emerald Ash Borer (EAB).
19Bee vs. Wasp
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20Bee vs. Wasp
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- EAB has devastated the Ash forests of
southwestern Ontario and most of the adjacent
States (nearly half a million square miles are
under quarantine).
21- In Canada and the United States it is accepted
that successful management of the beetle will
depend on powerful detection tools.
Bee vs. Wasp
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22- How can monitoring find the green needle in a
haystack?
Bee vs. Wasp
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23- Current monitoring for EAB involves setting
Trap Trees or purple Panel Traps across a
survey area.
Bee vs. Wasp
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24- We are exploring another option A native wasp
that evolved millions of years ago to
specifically collect buprestids beetles.
Bee vs. Wasp
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How to get the wasps to where they are needed?
25- Each night the female wasp sleeps in her burrow.
It is possible to cut out the nest (with its
sleeping occupant) and then move the nest to a
new location
Bee vs. Wasp
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- The following morning the transplanted wasp
adjusts to its new surroundings by performing an
orientation flight and then continues to collect
beetles.
26Bee vs. Wasp
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- In 2007 we began our nest transplant work using
the Colony-scoop. While successful the system
proved labour intensive.
27Bee vs. Wasp
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- In early 2008 we employed a cookie cutter like
device (originally designed to extract Nomia
melanderi (Apis) nests in Central United States.
Nomia melanderi is a ground nesting species of
bee used to pollinate alfalfa crops.
28Bee vs. Wasp
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- This tool allowed us to cut out blocks of soil
and load them into cardboard boxes the Box-nest.
29Bee vs. Wasp
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- The cookie cutter (Box-nests) proved too
labour-intensive, costly and disruptive to the
site, considering the limited number of wasps and
nests it successfully cut free from the ground.
In addition the boxes faired poorly during
transport.
30Bee vs. Wasp
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- In response to the cookie cutter/box-nest
issues we began experimenting with Tube-nests.
They have since proven to be much more
time-efficient, extremely cheap and less
disruptive to the natural colony.
31Bee vs. Wasp
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- We began regularly watering part of colonies -
three centimetres of water every five days
(artificial rainfall).
32Bee vs. Wasp
Area to be watered
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33Bee vs. Wasp
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- A hole punch and a small strip of plastic are
used to created a Collar. Placed over each
nest entrance, the collar controls the flow of
beetles into the nest.
34Bee vs. Wasp
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- What number of buprestids must be checked to
declare an area EAB free (when can we move on)?
Prey diversity curves
35Bee vs. Wasp
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- In July 2008 we began a comparison between
active and passive monitoring systems at various
sites in Toronto. The sites was previously
considered to have either low or no EAB
infestation.
36- The severe weather which raged across southern
Ontario wreaked havoc with the prism-traps and
mobile-nests.
Bee vs. Wasp
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37- Wasps caught away from the nest by a violent
storm almost never returned (reason unknown).
Bee vs. Wasp
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- With severe storms daily, during late July and
the first three weeks of August, our mobile
colonies were repeatedly decimated.
38- Both the prism-traps and mobile wasps locate EAB
at sites that showed no visual sign of
infestation.
Bee vs. Wasp
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Prism Trap Mobile-nests (June 13th July
28th, 47 days on site) Site 1 0.17 per
day 8.67 per day (using 5 wasps for 3
days) Site 4 0.21 per day 5.00 per day
(using 3 wasps for 1 day) Site 9 0
per day 0 per day (using 6 wasps
for 3 days) Note the 6 wasps at site 9
collected 28 native buprestids during the 3 days.
Pest Added to the Equation
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- When the weather did allow us to make our
comparisons, the handful of wasps performed a
stunning monitoring job.
39Bee vs. Wasp
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- Tube-nest Fidelity Can we ensure the wasp cut
out of the ground remains with the nest for the
duration of the summer?
40 Cerceris californica
The Pest
Our Ally
Improving Efficiency
Agrilus bilineatus
Mobility
- Prey Diversity changes during the wasps two
month flight season.
Comparison Trials
The Next Step
- How can this changing prey diversity (at and
between sites) be used to our advantage?
41June
August
July
The Pest
EAB
Our Ally
Cerceris fumipennis
Improving Efficiency
manipulated Cerceris flight season
Mobility
Comparison Trials
The Next Step
- Manipulate the emergence date of mobile wasps
such that the overlap in EAB and wasp flight
seasons is increased?
42Bee vs. Wasp
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- During the 2009 Ontario flight season we hope to
complete the Prism-trap, Trap-trees and Tube-nest
trials (if the weather allows us).
43People Who Made This Work
University of Guelph Morgan Jackson, Steve
Paiero, Dave Cheung, Dr. Matt Buck, Brenna Wells,
Matt Ireland, Carrie Woods and the Insect
Systematics Lab
Canadian Food Inspection Agency Wendy
Deevy-Laviolett, Ann Caya, Erin Bullas-Appleton,
Troy Kimoto, Rob Farvin, Linda DeVerno, Dr.
Eduard Jendek, Dr. Vasily Gerbennikov and Ken
Marchant
Canadian Forest Service Dr. Barry Lyons
Canadian Wildlife Service Dr. Dave Moore
Normandale Fish Hatchery Paul Malcomson
TerraSystems Dr. Saewan Koh
City of Windsor Marc Edwards and Paul Pratt
Walpole First Nations Clint Jacobs
Scouts Canada Mark Purcell
Halton Region Conservation Authority Dr. Dolf
Dejong
St. Laurence Cement Lesley Hymers and Diane
Bloomfield
Ontario Parks Ross Hart, Jim Wigle Ken Dawson,
Keith Early, Rick Hornsby, Emily Slavik, Sandy
Dobbyn, Dave Boddington, Greg Kocot, and Jill
VanNiekeck
44People Who Made This Work
Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture Sven-Erik
Spichiger and Bradley Regester
United States Forest Service Dr. Dennis Souto,
Michael Bohne, Dr. Richard Reardon and Glenn
Rosenholm
North Carolina State University Dr. Christine
Nalepa
Highland Hammock State Park Terry Hingtgen
West Virginia Department of Agriculture Laura
Miller
Maryland Department of Agriculture Dr. Gaye
Willams
JR Ding Darling NWR Joyce Mazourek
Michigan State University Merrie Parr
Clearview Farms Stuart and Sheryl Byerly
Queens Biological Research Station Floyd Connor
Maine Forest Service Colleen Teerling
Archbold Biological Station Debbie Upp and Dr
Mark Deyrup
West Virginia Department of Natural Resources
Sissies Summers
United States Department of Agriculture Jason
Watkins, Dr. Vic Mastro and Dr. Jim Cane
45Locate and monitor more colonies
Bee vs. Wasp
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Wasp Watcher Volunteers
Contact me at pcareles_at_uoguelph.ca www.cerceris.in
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