Published on October 26th, 2020 📆 | 1715 Views ⚑
0UW researcher put tiny tracking technology on giant hornets to help state deal with murderous pest
A researcher from the University of Washington, using tiny technology, has been playing a big role in helping state entomologists tackle a giant problem. Giant hornets, in fact.
The Washington Department of Agriculture finally located a nest of Asian giant hornets â or âmurder hornetsâ â near Blaine, Wash., this week and did so by trapping a few of the insects alive and then tagging them with lightweight radio trackers.
Vikram Iyer, a PhD student at the University of Washington, works in the Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineeringâs Networks and Mobile Systems Lab under the direction of Associate Professor Shyam Gollakota. His research focuses on wireless technologies including the development of bio-inspired and bio-integrative wireless sensors.
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Iyer, who was a GeekWire Geek of the Week this summer, has used his work to attach a small wireless camera to the back of a beetle and to develop tiny sensors that can be dropped from moths. That technology was used on two tracking attempts of the hornets, in which scientists were able to tag and follow the insects, but ultimately lost them before finding a nest.
Leveraging those lessons, a larger, commercial product not developed at the UW was used on a murder hornet that led to the location of the nest this week.
âWe learned a lot this time about how to attach the trackers,â Iyer told GeekWire, adding that a dental floss noose holding the device around the hornet did the trick. They also learned how the hornets behave and a rough idea of how fast they fly. While Iyerâs work focuses on how to significantly reduce the size and weight of the wireless attachments, the giant hornets had no issues flying with the larger commercial devices.
â[Thursday] I wasnât able to make it up there but the group tried slightly larger radios with longer battery life,â Iyer said. âThey followed a hornet back close to the same property where we lost it last week and noticed some insects flying into a hole in a tree which turned out to be the nest. A bit of a surprise considering we were expecting an underground nest.â
The Asian giant hornet is the worldâs largest species of hornet. The first-ever sightings occurred in the U.S. in December in Northwest Washington state. The hornets are known to attack and destroy honeybee hives during a âslaughter phaseâ where they kill bees by decapitating them. WSDA said it planned to eradicate the nest on Saturday. Update: Here are photos and videos from the eradication process:
These look like photos from the set of a sci-fi film but they actually show Washington State Dept of Agriculture workers in protective suits vacuuming hundreds of 2-inch-long invasive Asian giant hornets from the first nest found in the U.S. https://t.co/jcn2a9AkEh pic.twitter.com/klM3mqcrW4
â Ferris Jabr (@ferrisjabr) October 24, 2020
Got âem. Vacuumed out several #AsianGiantHornets from a tree cavity near Blaine this morning. Further details will be provided at a press conference on Monday. Staff not available for interviews before then. pic.twitter.com/31kgAUuJd0
â WA St Dept of Agr (@WSDAgov) October 24, 2020
Keep reading for more murder hornet tagging-and-tracking insight from Iyer:
GeekWire: Tell us more about the technology you used and how it works.
Iyer: âThe trackers that we have been making are based on small Bluetooth compatible sensors. The way it works is the little device has the chip, a battery, and antenna on it and works kind of like those bluetooth trackers you can attach to your keys. They send out radio signals and based on how strong they are at the receiver you can estimate how close you are. They can run for a little over 12 hours on a single battery charge. The great thing about being compatible with Bluetooth is that also means that anyone can receive the signal on a smartphone.
âOn our second tracking attempt, folks living in the community were interested in helping out so I showed them how to download a free phone app that would show the tracker signal. This really helped when we lost the signal for a second and a woman saw it on her phone flying away from us and we were able to find it again. In addition to just smartphones, you can extend the range by using a more directional antenna â think something that looks like a small satellite dish. We built a few of these that could connect to a phone that would plot a graph of the signal strength in real time.
âThe other cool thing about this approach is itâs programmable and we can interface sensors with it. We also included a temperature sensor onboard that might help figure out when the animal was in a nest since their nests tend to be warm ( around 90 degrees F).â
GW: Did you think it was going to work?
Iyer: âWe were pretty confident the device itself would transmit since we have used this technology for a few other projects in the lab, and were optimistic about the approach itself, since aside from plotting out sightings on a map, there arenât a lot of great ways to locate a nest. Of course, as we have learned when dealing with live insects, you never quite know what to expect. Would it fly? Whatâs the best way to attach it? I mean, chasing angry stinging insects through overgrown woods, what could possibly go wrong?â
GW: How do you feel now that it looks like a potentially dangerous nest could be eliminated?
Iyer: âItâs really great they found a nest as the best chance to solve this kind of problem is early before the population can really take a foothold and grow. Since these insects arenât native to the U.S. they donât have any natural predators or competition to keep their growth in check and can easily prey on the local bees and wasps. Itâs also hard to use other methods like pesticides as they would kill other insects like bees as well, so we are glad that we now have another approach to deal with this problem.â
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