| Literature DB >> 33177635 |
Eleanor P Jones1, Chris Conyers2, Victoria Tomkies2, Nigel Semmence3, David Fouracre3, Maureen Wakefield2, Kirsty Stainton4,5.
Abstract
Vespa velutina nigrithorax is an invasive species of hornet accidentally introduced into Europe in 2004. It feeds on invertebrates, including honey bees, and represents a threat to European apiculture. In 2016, the first nest of this hornet was detected and destroyed on mainland UK. A further 8 nests were discovered between 2016 and 2019. Nest dissection was performed on all nests together with microsatellite analyses of different life stages found in the nests to address the reproductive output and success of nests found in the UK. None of the nests had produced the next generation of queens. Follow-up monitoring in those regions detected no new nests in the following years. Diploid males were found in many UK nests, while microsatellite analysis showed that nests had low genetic diversity and the majority of queens had mated with one or two males. All UK nests derived from the European zone of secondary colonisation, rather than from the native range of the species. None of the nests discovered so far have been direct offspring of another UK nest. The evidence suggests that these nests were separate incursions from a continental population rather than belonging to a single established UK population of this pest.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33177635 PMCID: PMC7658989 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-76690-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Map of locations of nests of Vespa velutina nigrithorax discovered in the UK. These were: (1) one nest from Tetbury, Gloucestershire (2016), (2) one nest from Woolacombe, Devon (2017), (3) two nests from Fowey, Cornwall (2018), (4) one nest from New Alresford, Hampshire (2018), (5) one nest from Brockenhurst, Hampshire (2018), (6) one nest from Drayton Bassett, Staffordshire (2019) and (7) two nests from Christchurch, Dorset (2019). The hornet icon denotes the locations of individual hornets found.
Summary of observations from all nests discovered in the UK.
| Nest date and location | Date destroyed | Nest diameter (cm) | Number of combs | Comb diameters (cm) | Sex of adults (morphological)a | Brood present | Haploid egg production (estimated) | N. paternal genotypes (estimated) | N diploid males/genotyped malesab |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tetbury | 28-Sep-16 | 23 | 5 | 20, 23, 21, 16, 7.5 | 13♂, 57♀e | All stages | 21st September | 1 | 9/9 |
| Woolacombe | 27-Sep-17 | 27 | 7 | 25, 24, 27, 20, 16, 24, 12 | 166♀ | All stages | 02nd September | 2–3 | n. a |
| Fowey 1 | 06-Sep-18 | 15 | 3 | 15, 15, 12 | 3♂ | No eggs or larvae | n.a | 1 | 3/3 |
| Fowey 2 | 21-Sep-18 | 19 | 4 | 18, 19, 16.5, 12 | 7♂, 8♀ | All stages | 30th August | 1c | 10/10 |
| New Alresford | 25-Sep-18 | 18 | 4 | 13.5, 18, 17, 14 | 28♂, 94♀ | All stages | 03rd September | 2 | 10/10 |
| Brockenhurst | 04-Oct-18 | 18.5 | 3 | 18, 18.5, 16 | 5♂, 13♀ | No eggs | 29th August | 2 | 0/5 |
| Drayton Bassett | 04-Sept-19 | n.d.d | n.d.d | n.d.d | 5♀ | All stages | n.a | 1 | n. a |
| Christchurch 1 | 03-Oct-19 | 13 | 2 | 6, 8 | 1♀queen | Eggs & early larvae | 01 October | 1 | n. a |
| Christchurch 2 | 10-Oct-19 | n.d.d | 2 | n.d.d | No adults present | No eggs | n.a | 1 | n. a |
aAdults were lost from some nests during nest destruction.
bUp to 10 individuals identified morphologically as males were genotyped per nest, and could either be haploid (“true” males) or diploid.
cThe genetic diversity data were calculated for the individuals for Fowey 1 and 2 combined, given they were offspring from a single queen.
dNo data; nest too damaged.
eThe symbol ♀ denotes a worker female unless suffixed by “queen”.
Ploidy of nests.
| Nest | Eggs | Larvae | Pupae | Teneral adults | Adults |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tetbury | 9 haploid, 2 diploid | 20 diploid | 20 diploid | 20 diploid | 22 diploid |
| Woolacombe | 7 haploid, 2 diploid | Failed* | 2 haploid, 8 diploid | 10 diploid | 10 diploid |
| Fowey 1 | n.a | 10 diploid | 10 diploid | 10 diploid | 3 diploid |
| Fowey 2 | 9 haploid | 6 haploid, 4 diploid | 10 diploid | 10 diploid | 10 diploid |
| Brockenhurst | n.a | 9 haploid | 10 haploid | 10 haploid | 9 haploid, 11 diploid |
| New Alresford | 2 haploid, 5 diploid | 5 haploid, 5 diploid | 10 diploid | 10 diploid | 10 diploid |
| Drayton Bassett | 10 diploid | 8 diploid | 7 diploid | 9 diploid | 6 diploid |
| Christchurch 1 | 2 haploid, 8 diploid | 10 diploid | n.a | n.a | 1 diploid |
| Christchurch 2 | n.a | 10 diploid | 10 diploid | 10 diploid | n.a |
n.a. None available. This life stage was not found in the nest.
*Samples failed to amplify.
Figure 2Images of UK nests: (a) Tetbury, (b) Woolacombe, (c) Fowey nest 1, (d) Fowey nest 2, (e) Brockenhurst, (f) New Alresford, (g) Drayton Bassett, (h) Christchurch nest 1 and (i) Christchurch nest 2. Where shown, scale bar represents 5 cm.
Genetic diversity measure (average number of alleles per locus) and the observed and expected heterozygosity for Asian hornet populations sampled in the British Isles, and from France (data from Arca et al. 2015[11]).
| Christchurch | Drayton Basset | Brockenhurst | New Alresford | Fowey | Woolacombe | Tetbury | France* | China (Yunnan)* | China (Zejiang)* | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of samples | 64 | 43 | 11 | 40 | 78 | 77 | 93 | 85 | 20 | 30 |
| Observed heterozygosity | 0.5299 | 0.5081 | 0.4430 | 0.5017 | 0.3962 | 0.5714 | 0.3816 | 0.53 | 0.71 | 0.77 |
| Expected heterozygosity | 0.3391 | 0.3120 | 0.3277 | 0.3259 | 0.2630 | 0.3886 | 0.2422 | 0.5542 | 0.79 | 0.79 |
| Mean alleles per locus | 1.80 | 1.80 | 1.80 | 1.87 | 1.73 | 2.00 | 1.60 | 4.00 | 7.3 | 8 |
Haploid individuals were excluded from the analysis. Figures and locations in italics are represented by single individuals.
*Data from Arca et al. 2015.