homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Scientists want to make sex traps for Asian giant hornets -- the insects that want to wipe out honeybees

These ghastly insects are sometimes called "murder hornets" because they've killed dozens of people. Now entomologists want to weaponize sex against them.

Tibi Puiu
March 15, 2022 @ 7:44 pm

share Share

Asian giant hornets represent a huge threat to honey bees and the vicious insects have been gaining a lot of ground recently in the United States, threatening to devastate bee populations. In a desperate last-ditch effort, government officials have encouraged residents to help dispose of the hornets by setting up homemade traps made using bottles and orange juice. But a much more effective trap could exploit a weakness shared by all manner of creatures: sex.

Asian Giant Hornet (Vespa mandarinia). Credit: Wikimedia Commons.

In a new study, scientists have demonstrated effective hornet traps that can lure males using three sex pheromones. The traps, which were tested in China, the home turf of these dangerous hornets, neutralized thousands of male Asian giant hornets, but no other insects, showing the identified sex pheromones are specific to the hornets. Using the chemicals in traps would thus not interfere with other insects that may play an important role in the ecosystem.

Researchers from the Chinese Academy of Sciences and the University of California San Diego first caught several giant hornet queens and their drones from nests in Yunnan, China. After swabbing the queens’ sex glands, the scientists employed gas chromatography-mass spectrometry — an analytical method that can identify the individual chemical components of a sample down to the molecular level — to pinpoint the exact pheromones used by the queens.

Some of the key components that were detected include hexanoic acid, octanoic acid, and decanoic acid. When male hornets were exposed to each of these components in the lab, they immediately reacted, showing signs of attraction. But would these isolated pheromones work in the field as well?

So the team went to work, crafting nets laced with just one of the pheromones, a mix of the three, or an extract from the hornet queen’s sex glands, and setting them up across the countryside. Although the sex gland extract was the most effective, the isolated chemicals worked well to lure in sex-crazed males too. In fact, thousands of males were trapped during these field tests, whereas control snares with no pheromones only trapped a few insects.

Close-up photo of Asian giant hornet and its mighty mandibles. Credit: Washington State Department of Agriculture.

That’s great news for honeybees, which are being gruesomely killed in large numbers by these invading insects. The hornets use their large mandibles to wipe out a honeybee hive in a matter of hours, decapitating the bees and flying away with their thoraxes to feed their larvae.

Asian hornets, which can measure up to two inches long, pose a serious risk to humans too. Their potent venom and stinger deliver an excruciating pain that people have described as having a hot metal pierce their skin. In Japan, where these menacing insects have been nesting for some time, 50 people are killed by their stings every year. They’re called “murder hornets” for good reason. In the United States, they’ve just begun to arrive.

Entomologists affiliated with the U.S. Department of Agriculture have been sent to exterminate some hornet hives that have been identified thus far, mostly in Washington State, but finding these nests can prove challenging. With pheromone traps, you can have the hornets come to you.

The findings were reported in the journal Current Biology.

share Share

A Dutch 17-Year-Old Forgot His Native Language After Knee Surgery and Spoke Only English Even Though He Had Never Used It Outside School

He experienced foreign language syndrome for about 24 hours, and remembered every single detail of the incident even after recovery.

Your Brain Hits a Metabolic Cliff at 43. Here’s What That Means

This is when brain aging quietly kicks in.

Scientists Just Found a Hidden Battery Life Killer and the Fix Is Shockingly Simple

A simple tweak could dramatically improve the lifespan of Li-ion batteries.

Westerners cheat AI agents while Japanese treat them with respect

Japan’s robots are redefining work, care, and education — with lessons for the world.

Scientists Turn to Smelly Frogs to Fight Superbugs: How Their Slime Might Be the Key to Our Next Antibiotics

Researchers engineer synthetic antibiotics from frog slime that kill deadly bacteria without harming humans.

This Popular Zero-Calorie Sugar Substitute May Be Making You Hungrier, Not Slimmer

Zero-calorie sweeteners might confuse the brain, especially in people with obesity

Any Kind of Exercise, At Any Age, Boosts Your Brain

Even light physical activity can sharpen memory and boost mood across all ages.

A Brain Implant Just Turned a Woman’s Thoughts Into Speech in Near Real Time

This tech restores speech in real time for people who can’t talk, using only brain signals.

Using screens in bed increases insomnia risk by 59% — but social media isn’t the worst offender

Forget blue light, the real reason screens disrupt sleep may be simpler than experts thought.

Beetles Conquered Earth by Evolving a Tiny Chemical Factory

There are around 66,000 species of rove beetles and one researcher proposes it's because of one special gland.