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Invasion success and management strategies for social vespula wasps

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posted on 2021-11-02, 20:27 authored by Philip LesterPhilip Lester, JR Beggs
Three species of Vespula have become invasive in Australia, Hawailsquoi, New Zealand, and North and South America and continue to spread. These social wasp species can achieve high nest densities, and their behavioral plasticity has led to substantial impacts on recipient communities. Ecologically, they affect all trophic levels, restructuring communities and altering resource flows. Economically, their main negative effect is associated with pollination and the apicultural industry. Climate change is likely to exacerbate their impacts in many regions. Introduced Vespula spp. likely experience some degree of enemy release from predators or parasites, although they are exposed to a wide range of microbial pathogens in both their native and introduced range. Toxic baits have been significantly improved over the last decade, enabling effective landscape-level control. Although investigated extensively, no effective biological control agents have yet been found. Emerging technologies such as gene drives are under consideration.

Funding

Novel Wasp Control | Funder: LANDCARE RESEARCH

History

Preferred citation

Lester, P. J. & Beggs, J. R. (2019). Invasion success and management strategies for social vespula wasps. Annual Review of Entomology, 64(1), 51-71. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-ento-011118-111812

Journal title

Annual Review of Entomology

Volume

64

Issue

1

Publication date

2019-01-07

Pagination

51-71

Publisher

Annual Reviews

Publication status

Published

ISSN

0066-4170

eISSN

1545-4487

Language

en