The New Zealand Herald

DNA hope in killing wasp scourge

- Jamie Morton

It’s one of our most notorious recent arrivals — but the European paper wasp could soon meet one of the most sophistica­ted pesticides designed.

The yellow and black menace is about to become the target of a next generation of pesticides aiming to kill it at its molecular roots, using the latest “gene-silencing” science.

The wasp is mainly found around the Nelson region and is thought to have been in the country for a decade at least.

It’s seen as a serious scourge not just as an invasive species, but one that causes a particular headache for anyone whose home it moves into.

“While we already have the Asian and Australian paper wasps here, it’s how they mass their population­s that sets them apart,” Victoria University of Wellington insect ecologist Professor Phil Lester said.

“A house might have 20 nests around its eaves — that’s a lot of wasps. They also tend have much larger nests, because they start earlier in summer.” The wasp also posed a

A house might have 20 nests around its eaves — that’s a lot of wasps.

major risk to our environmen­t. It likely fed on native insects, competing with local species.

“If they spread throughout New Zealand, they’re going to be a major problem for us.”

But Lester and fellow scientists aim to stop the wasp in its tracks, with a cutting-edge agent drawing on gene silencing, or RNAi — a highly targeted and environmen­tally safe way to wipe out pest insects.

Lester’s team plan to create short, synthetic segments of ribonuclei­c acid, or RNA — a molecule essential in coding and regulating the expression of genes.

Fed to the wasps through an attractive bait, their doublestra­nded RNA would mimic that found in the wasps themselves — but instead of doing jobs like creating proteins, they’d do the opposite.

“It’s merely stopping cellular processes from working. It might mean stopping messages reaching their cells so they can make essential proteins, carbohydra­tes or chemicals that it needs to survive.”

He said that as the genomic informatio­n of the wasp wasn’t being changed, it couldn’t be seen as genetic modificati­on.

Moreover, the technology has the promise of being able to kill one species without the risk of harming others.

Richard Toft, the insect ecologist behind the revolution­ary wasp bait Vespex, would help design an attractant, and respected University of Otago geneticist Professor Peter Dearden would collaborat­e on the gene silencing solution.

The study is one of two new projects to get million-dollar grants through the Government’s Endeavour Fund.

The other, led by Plant and Food Research, aims to reveal the sex pheromones of New Zealand’s two main vespula wasp species, so they can be exploited through a new biocontrol agent.

Phil Lester, Victoria University

 ?? Photo / File ?? New pesticide aims to kill the European paper wasp using “gene-silencing” science.
Photo / File New pesticide aims to kill the European paper wasp using “gene-silencing” science.

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