mazzamazda
Field Bee
- Joined
- Feb 16, 2010
- Messages
- 620
- Reaction score
- 61
- Location
- Porto, Portugal
- Hive Type
- 14x12
- Number of Hives
- 200
A pic of the loaded hornet
Yes, that is exactly the problem with using the poison neat, hornet dies too early and doesn't pass on the poison before it dies.
Frontline is a mix of Fipronil (to kill adults) and Methoprene (to kill larvae).
As I understand it your strategy is to use foraging adults to carry poison back to the nest to poison it - but that the Fipronil is killing them too soon.
Why not just use the Methoprene? It is used on Fire Ants, so is effective on Hymenoptera. Feeding poisoned bait to foraging ants is a tried and tested technique - as I remember the problem was finding an attractive bait and you have solved that problem!
Methoprene is a juvenile hormone analog - it should do a slow but sure job of killing off the nest. Certainly worth a try?
It has a better tox profile than Fipronil (Dutch egg scare anyone?).
Methoprene is about as "safe" as you can get with an insecticide. Indeed it has been added to human drinking water cisterns and fed to cattle to control flies in the dung!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Methoprene
Chrismcd - using a larvaecide misses the point. The whole strategy is based on killing the queen before she has chance to spawn the new sexual progeny so fipronil is key as is presenting it in a form which encourages trophallaxis.
This is becuase the major control of Asian hornet density is Asain hornet queens usurping other Asain queen hornets prime nest when their own prime nest fails
if you read Prof Martin Book on the Asian hornet, his view is that trapping queens has the reverse effect in producing single large colonies that produce a great more queens for the next year and reinforces the common two year cycle as found with other yellow jacket wasps ( Vespula). This is becuase the major control of Asian hornet density is Asain hornet queens usurping other Asain queen hornets prime nest when their own prime nest fails
Hi Karol,
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If the foraging hornets are collecting protein they are still feeding larvae - including the late "sexual" generations.
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Works for ants, so I do not see why it should not work on hornets
<snip>
You can't predate something that's dead and dead stuff is carrion rather than prey?
Scavenge?
The advantage of the Mazzamethod is that it takes a small amount of short lived pesticide (reduces risk of non target species being poisoned) and relatively little effort to kill the queen early on in the nest life cycle. So not only does it prevent development of the sexual castes it also prevents development of workers which do the bulk of the damage to bee colonies during the hunting phase.
Just blast the fookers with bendiocarb , it does not kill them or anything straight away but the end results are nice.
My understanding from Mazzamazda that his formulation takes 3hrs to kill which seems ideal to me. Just enough time to get back and distribute the toxin.
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