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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 • Bite is similar to brown recluse • Now responsible for more necrotic envenomations in US than any other sp. 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 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. 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 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 Hymenopteran Stinger Source Wasp Stinger 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) Example: Apitoxin (Honeybee) Name % Function Melitten 52 Apamin 15 - 20 Cortisol production; neurotoxin Phospholipase A2 (A1 in wasps) 10 - 12 Cell-lytic; decreases blood pressure; anticoagulant; prostoglandin stimulant Hyaluronidase Protease Inhibitors Dopamine & noradrenalin Histamine 1-3 2 1-2 0.5 - 2 Anti-inflammatory agent; induces of cortisol production; cell-lytic. Dilates capillaries speeding inflammatory spread Prevents Inactivation of other constituents Increases pulse rate Allergic response 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 Example Symptoms Adult Onset Allergy Bee sting hives on arm from a sting on leg Paper wasp sting near eye 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 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 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 Solitary Wasps • Velvet ants, several spp. • Nest parasites of ground-nesting bees & wasps • Very painful sting • Yellowjackets, hornets & paper wasps • Yellowjackets are the important group. Social Wasps – Large, annual nests – Aggressively defended by workers – Often in situations with human contact. • Baldfaced hornets are actually yellow jackets which act like hornets. Bald faced hornet (right) & nest (above) Above: Western Yellow Jacket Above: European hornet Hornets vs Wasps Character Hornets Wasps Genus Vespa Nest Habitat Above ground, tree hollows 1 Dolichovespula, Vespula Below ground, wall voids ~12 important Spp in N. America 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 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 Probable Eventual Distribution of Africanized Bees 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. 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