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1,400 species found in guts of Asian hornets, highlighting their invasive impact

1,400 species found in guts of Asian hornets
An Asian hornet dismembering a honey bee. Credit: Kennedy

A study of Asian hornets has found about 1,400 different species in their guts.

University of Exeter researchers tested Asian samples from France, Spain, Jersey and the UK throughout the hornet's active season.

The paper, published in the journal Science of the Total Environment, is titled "Broad ecological threats of an invasive hornet revealed through a deep sequencing approach."

Eaten prey included a wide range of bees, wasps, flies, beetles, butterflies, moths and spiders.

Although the European honey bee was the most common species found in the hornets—appearing in all sampled nests and almost all larvae within those nests—their diet is a lot broader.

An Asian hornet nest. Credit: Peter John Kennedy

An , Asian hornets are now found in much of western Europe. Nests are destroyed as authorities try to keep the species out.

"Asian hornets are known to prey on honey bees, but until now the full range of their diet hasn't been tested," said lead author Siffreya Pedersen.

"The diet varied strongly over the seasons and between regions, showing that they are highly flexible predators.

"Most are in decline due to factors such as habitat destruction and chemical pollution. The expanding area inhabited by Asian hornets poses an extra threat."

1,400 species found in guts of Asian hornets
An Asian hornet nest. Credit: John de Carteret

The study used a method called deep sequencing to identify prey species in the guts of more than 1,500 Asian hornet larvae, which eat food provided by adult hornets.

Of the top 50 invertebrate prey species identified, 43 are known to visit flowers—and among these were Europe's three main crop pollinators: the European honey bee, the buff-tailed bumblebee and the red-tailed bumblebee.

"Insects play vital roles in enabling ecosystems to function—including pollination, decomposition and pest control," Pedersen said.

"Our study provides important additional evidence of the threat posed by Asian hornets as they spread across Europe," said Dr. Peter Kennedy, from Exeter's Environment and Sustainability Institute.

The researchers identified 1,449 "operational taxonomic units" in the guts of hornet larvae. More than half could be identified as specific species, but the rest could not—so the exact number of species found in the samples is not certain. Samples used in the study were provided by the Jersey Asian Hornet Group, INRAe, the University of Vigo and DEFRA.

More information: Broad ecological threats of an invasive hornet revealed through a deep sequencing approach, Science of The Total Environment (2025).

Journal information: Science of the Total Environment

Provided by University of Exeter

Citation: 1,400 species found in guts of Asian hornets, highlighting their invasive impact (2025, March 4) retrieved 3 August 2025 from /news/2025-03-species-guts-asian-hornets-highlighting.html
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