1 / 23

Ants, Wasps, & Bees

Ants, Wasps, & Bees. Announcements Speaking Today: Amanda Meadows Speaking Next Tuesday: Elizabeth Andrews QUIZ NEXT TUESDAY OVER CHAPTERS 25, 26, 21, 24. New Spider Threat in N America. Tegenaria agrestis , Hobo Spider Introduced from Europe to Seattle in 1930’s Moved into homes

Télécharger la présentation

Ants, Wasps, & Bees

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ants, Wasps, & Bees Announcements • Speaking Today: Amanda Meadows • Speaking Next Tuesday: Elizabeth Andrews • QUIZ NEXT TUESDAY OVER CHAPTERS 25, 26, 21, 24

  2. New Spider Threat in N America • Tegenaria agrestis, Hobo Spider • Introduced from Europe to Seattle in 1930’s • Moved into homes • Bite is similar to brown recluse • Now responsible for more necrotic envenomations in US than any other sp.

  3. Spiders & MRSA • MRSA = methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus • Community-Acquired has been associated with spiders • Association is two-fold • Transmission of MRSA via spider bites • Misdiagnosis of MRSA as spider bites • Misdiagnosis has been largely corrected by including MRSA screen as part of the spider bite diagnostic protocol. Example • Educational effort continues in the medical community

  4. Other effects: Urticating Hairs • Barbed hairs on the abdomen of many New World tarantulas • Used as a defense, territorial marker. • Commonly encountered by pet owners when they clean tarantula cages • Nonvenomous but some people have allergies.

  5. Order Hymenoptera: Ants, Bees, & Wasps • Relatively recent evolutionary origin • Generally the most beneficial group of insects to man • Useful products (e.g. honey) • Biological control • Members have the most advanced communication, learning, and vision • Most of the social insects in this group • Including specializations for social defense • Most attacks on humans are colony defense actions

  6. Medical significance of this group is in its sting • Stingers are modified ovipositors so only females sting • Most stinging females are not reproductive • Stinger itself can be a problem but mostly it’s the venom • Hymenopteran families of most medical significance are: • Ants • Formicidae – Social • Solitary Wasps • Mutilidae – Velvet ants; Cow Killers • Social Wasps • Vespidae – Yellow Jackets; Hornets; Paper Wasps • Social Bees • Apidae – Honey bees; Bumble Bees

  7. Hymenopteran Stinger Source

  8. Wasp Stinger

  9. Hymenopteran venoms • Depending on the size/species one sting is generally 0.01 – 0.15 mg venom • Typical Human LD50 is ~100 mg • Most are chemically similar to snake venom and can be deactivated with ethanol • Neurotoxins and agents to assist them • In vertebrates, neurotoxins cause temporary pain, the other agents cause real damage • Often contain non-toxic components • Pheromones (trail marking, alarm, marking)

  10. Example: Apitoxin (Honeybee)

  11. Reactions to Hymenopteran Stings • Immediate localized reaction or swelling (non-allergic responses) • Mild: erythema, swelling, and transient pain at the sting site that subsides within a few hours • More Severe: may involve an entire extremity. Swelling of the airway, tongue etc can occur. • Systemic toxic response from multiple stings • Mild: Hives • More Severe: vomiting, dizziness, confusion, rash, general weakness, shortness of breath and wheezing, and chest pain • Systemic allergic reactions - rare • May occur from an initial sting or may be acquired • anaphylactic shock, difficulty in breathing, and death within 30 minutes

  12. Example Symptoms Adult Onset Allergy Bee sting hives on arm from a sting on leg Paper wasp sting near eye

  13. Ants • ~10,000 spp world wide only a few are medically important • Ant “venom” varies dramatically across species, most are non-toxic to vertebrates. • Medically important species • Fire ants • Bull-dog ant

  14. Fire Ants • Solenopsis spp. • S. invicta, Red Imported Fire Ant (RIFA) the most important • Introduced into US in the 1930’s, now in most of SE US. • Have had many ecological ramifications. Ex. here • Sting 15 – 25 million/year in US • Cause $750 million damage in Agriculture/year

  15. Bulldog Ants • Ants in the genus, Myrmecia. M. pilosula is the “Jack Jumper”. • Australia & Tasmania (Jack Jumpers). • In Tasmania, they cause more deaths than spiders, wasps, snakes & sharks combined. • Generate anaphylactic shock in high incidence. Life-threatening reactions in 1-2% of cases. • Antivenom stocks maintained throughout their range. Jack Jumper

  16. Solitary Wasps • Velvet ants, several spp. • Nest parasites of ground-nesting bees & wasps • Very painful sting

  17. Social Wasps • Yellowjackets, hornets & paper wasps • Yellowjackets are the important group. • Large, annual nests • Aggressively defended by workers • Often in situations with human contact. • Baldfaced hornets are actually yellow jackets which act like hornets. Above: Western Yellow Jacket Bald faced hornet (right) & nest (above) Above: European hornet

  18. Hornets vs Wasps

  19. Bees • Insects in the unranked taxon, Anthophila, several families • 20,000 spp most of which are harmless • A group that switched from predation to feeding on nectar & pollen • Co-evolved with flowers. • Few are agressive

  20. Africanized Bees • Hybrids of the European honey bee and the African honey bee (different subspecies) • Originally imported to Brazil to increase honey production • Defends hive more aggressively • Kill 1 – 2 people/year in US Animated map of spread

  21. Probable Eventual Distribution of Africanized Bees

  22. First Aid • Topical steroid cream (hydrocortisone), • Cream containing aloe vera. • Fire ant creams: • regular toothpaste. • Solution of half bleach and half water applied immediately to the area can reduce the pain, itching and, perhaps, pustule formation. • Oral medicines: antihistamines.

  23. Medical Use of Hymenoptera • Ant head sutures • Uses soldier ant heads • Used for at least 3,000 years • Bee venom therapy • 1980 FDA licensed its use for desensitation • Now >500 human and veterinary applications • American Apitherapy Society

More Related