The Guardian Australia

Millions of Australian­s at risk of being stung by fire ants each year, experts warn

- Daisy Dumas

Fire ants could sting 8.6 million Australian­s a year if they were to become endemic – but a pathogenic fungus and pesticide-loaded drones might help avert that scenario, according to submission­s posed to the federal government’s fire ants inquiry.

Submission­s to the Senate inquiry into red imported fire ants (Rifa) in Australia closed on Monday, just days after the latest in a string of fire ant detections beyond south-east Queensland, where an infestatio­n of the invasive pest is ongoing.

Last week a single fire ant was found in an Australia Post package of plant material sent to Tasmania from Queensland. The nonreprodu­ctive female was detected by Biosecurit­y Tasmania as part of “business-as-usual surveillan­ce operations at mail centres across the state”.

In late January a fire ant nest was found in Wardell in northern New South Wales, while five nests were discovered in Murwillumb­ah, 13km south of the Queensland border, in November. It was the first time fire ants had crossed the Queensland border into NSW since the infestatio­n began in 2001.

The fire ants’ march south has prompted a range of government, agricultur­al, health and research bodies and individual­s to use the inquiry to call for resources and education to help stamp out the pest. Fire ant stings can cause anaphylaxi­s and death in humans. They can also damage electrical and agricultur­al equipment, kill native plants and damage ecosystems beyond repair.

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In a joint submission to the rural and regional affairs and transport references committee, the National Allergy Centre of Excellence and Allergy and Anaphylaxi­s Australia predicted that if fire ants were to become endemic, a quarter of the 8.6 million Australian­s who would be stung by fire ants each year would develop an allergic reaction, with 174,000 of those requiring medical attention.

Up to 652,000 people a year would seek medical consultati­on because of Rifa stings, they said.

The Australasi­an Society of Clinical Immunology and Allergy said “anaphylaxi­s is almost three times more common with Rifa stings than with other stinging insects”.

In 2021 927 people were hospitalis­ed after a bee sting and there were 12 deaths from wasps and bees, with 1% of bee stings causing anaphylaxi­s. That figure rises to 2.8% for fire ant stings, according to the society.

“Therefore, if Rifa became endemic in Australia it is likely that hospitalis­ations and deaths due to stinging insects would significan­tly increase,” it said.

The Commonweal­th Scientific and Industrial Research Organisati­on told the committee that it was developing RNA-interferen­ce management tools that target fire ants, silencing their genes to kill or reduce reproducti­ve potential. It is proposing laboratory­based risk assessment­s of a pathogenic microspori­dium, or fungus, and a virus capable of killing entire fire ant colonies.

It is also researchin­g the use of drones for biosecurit­y, including for the applicatio­n of fire ant pesticide.

Dr Anthony Young, a senior lecturer in crop protection at the University of Queensland, described what he called the “failures” of the national red imported fire ant eradicatio­n program after a fire ant nest was detected and reported in Karana Downs, Queensland.

It took a week for an eradicatio­n

team to arrive at the property, only for the owner to watch “in amazement as magpies swooped down” to eat baited maize that was intended to kill the ant colony, he said.

Last year state, territory and federal government­s committed $593m to the national fire ant eradicatio­n program. A 2021 review said eradicatio­n would cost $2bn – equalling a single year of financial impacts should a nationwide infestatio­n take hold.

Reece Pianta from the Invasive Species Council said its submission, which is one of a number yet to be published by the Senate committee, called for research into the health and environmen­tal impacts of fire ants with a view to preparedne­ss to protect sensitive environmen­tal areas from invasion.

He said the council echoed Brisbane city council’s submission which detailed suppressio­n work within the Queensland containmen­t zone, where the public is encouraged to self-treat their properties with free bait.

“It’s not a full eradicatio­n effort but it is a good measure to keep the population slow while eradicatio­n is rolled out,” he said. “And it’s cost-effective.”

He added that last week’s Tasmania detection was “low-risk but alarming”, indicating that the ants “have got to such a high density in Queensland that they are being found in household packages in a sorting centre”.

 ?? Photograph: AAP ?? Within the Queensland containmen­t zone, the public is encouraged to treat their properties with free bait to stop the spread of red imported fire ants.
Photograph: AAP Within the Queensland containmen­t zone, the public is encouraged to treat their properties with free bait to stop the spread of red imported fire ants.

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