Bumblebee populations under threat as nests overheat due to climate change, U of G researchers find

Scientists call for urgent research into how bumblebees can survive rising temperatures.

research jobs guelph

Social Sharing

As the world's bumblebee population continues to decline, new research from the University of Guelph is pointing to global warming as a major contributor to the demise of the critical pollinators.

Peter Kevan, lead researcher and professor emeritus at the university, says if bumblebees — which nest communally like honey bees — can't adapt to rising temperatures, they would have problems reproducing.

"If temperatures in the surrounding area get too cold, they can withstand a certain amount of chilling, but it seems that if things get too hot, that becomes rather critical very quickly," Kevan said on CBC K-W's The Morning Edition .

"Above about 36 C in the nest, it's probable that is lethal to the larval bumblebees and so the result is the colony will start to collapse, its social structure will break down as fewer workers are produced for foraging.

"Also, there will be the death at certain times of the year when the sexual larvae are being produced and then go out and the males mate with the new queens and that lays the foundation for the next year's generation," he added.

Yellow banded bumble bee

Bumblebees usually maintain a consistent temperature of around 28 to 32 C no matter where the bees are in the world.

Kevan said that from northern Ellesmere Island and northern Nunavut, all the way into the tropics, all the species of bumblebees that have been researched seem to incubate their brood at about the same temperature. 

"It seems to be a fairly constant thing no matter what species, no matter what part of the world one is looking at," he said.

Kevan's study into climate change and its impact on bumblebee nests has been published in the journal Frontiers in Bee Science.

The researchers have called for more research to be done urgently into how bumblebees can survive rising temperatures.

  • Canadian researchers warn of 'cascading impacts' as bumblebee species decline
  • Rare bees found in Guelph through bumble bee count

In 2019, a team of researchers at York University warned that the American bumblebee is facing imminent extinction from Canada, and this could lead to "cascading impacts" throughout the country.

Professor Laurence Packer said then, that quite a few of the 42 species of bumblebees in Canada are exhibiting substantial declines.

"We've got a situation where  ... the number of species that you can find in an area has decreased," he said.

"These kinds of declines in important pollinators are going to have cascading impacts throughout the entire ecosystem."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

research jobs guelph

Web Writer / Editor

Desmond Brown is a GTA-based freelance writer and editor. You can reach him at: [email protected].

  • More by Desmond Brown
  • Twitter: @Desmond_Loren

New to US: Hornets that butcher bees and sting people. Humans are fighting back.

This story was produced by Knowable Magazine .  

In August 2023, a beekeeper near the port of Savannah, Georgia , noticed that something odd was hunting his honeybees. Black with bright yellow legs, the flying insect would hover at the hive entrance, capture a flying honeybee and butcher it before darting off with the bee’s thorax, the meatiest bit. 

“He’d only been keeping bees since March … but he knew enough to know that something wasn’t right,” said Lewis Bartlett, an ecologist at the University of Georgia, who helped investigate. Bartlett had seen these honeybee hunters before, during his PhD studies in England a decade earlier. The dreaded yellow-legged hornet had arrived in North America. 

Naturally occurring from Afghanistan to eastern China and Indonesia, the yellow-legged hornet, Vespa velutina , has expanded during the last two decades into South Korea, Japan and Europe. When the hornet invades new territory, it preys on honeybees , bumblebees and other insects. One yellow-legged hornet can kill dozens of honeybees in a single day. It can also decimate colonies through intimidation alone by deterring honeybees from foraging.  

The yellow-legged hornet is so destructive that it was the first insect to land on the European Union’s blacklist of invasive species. In Portugal, honey production in some regions has slumped by more than 35% since the hornet’s arrival. French beekeepers have reported losses of 30% to 80% of colonies in some locales, costing the economy an estimated $33 million annually.  

Background: Invasive yellow-legged hornet spotted in US

All that destruction may be linked to a single, mated queen that arrived at the port of Bordeaux, France, in a shipment of bonsai pots from China before 2004. During her first spring, she established a nest, reared workers and laid eggs.

By fall, hundreds of new mated queens likely exited and found overwintering sites, restarting the cycle in the spring. The hornet’s fortitude allowed it to surge across France’s borders into Spain, Portugal, Italy, Belgium, Germany, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom and Switzerland in only two decades, hurtling onward by as much as 60 miles a year. 

Suspected stowaway  

As the hornet fanned out across Europe, scientists in North America wondered when it might arrive on their side of the Atlantic. Queens sometimes overwinter in crates and containers, allowing them to stow away on ships. In 2013, researchers cautioned that a yellow-legged hornet invasion at any one point along the East Coast had the potential to spread across the country.  

After the first sighting last summer, Georgia’s agricultural commissioner urged people to report hornets and nests, and warned that the insect could threaten the state’s $73-billion agriculture industry.

American farmers grow more than 100 different crops that depend on pollinators. Georgia mass-produces honeybees and ships them north to jumpstart spring crops, like Maine blueberries, before local pollinators have awakened.  

Within two weeks, scientists found a nest in a tree, about 80 feet off the ground. In a night-operation, while the hornets idled, a tree surgeon climbed to the nest, sprayed it with insecticide, and cut it down. At a press conference, Georgia Department of Agriculture staff displayed a chunk of the nest about the size of a human torso, warning that this was only about a quarter of the full nest and larger than those seen in Europe.  

“Savannah, Georgia, is primo climate for these guys,” says honeybee researcher Gard Otis of the University of Guelph. It’s a lush, subtropical paradise, giving the insect a long growing season — and a rich hunting ground. 

For the next several months, Bartlett aided the state agricultural researchers in setting traps and following individual hornets to find other nests. By the end of 2023, they’d removed four more. “We think we’ve discovered them at a very early stage, which is why pursuing eradication is very, very plausible,” Bartlett said in November. If not, Georgia and its neighbors could get caught in an endless — and costly — game of whack-a-mole. 

Formidable predator  

The yellow-legged hornet and other social wasps, like the common yellowjacket, the German yellowjacket and the western yellowjacket, have successfully invaded every continent except Antarctica. They’ve been introduced to new areas by global trade, sometimes repeatedly.  

Social wasps live in colonies of individuals organized into groups that divvy up the labor of reproduction, foraging and caregiving. These behaviors, and the insects’ nearly omnivorous appetites, make them among the most successful invaders of new habitats and fiercest aggressors of native fauna.

In their endemic ranges, these wasps are eaten by skunks, squirrels or bears, or snagged in flight by kingbirds and tanagers. But in the absence of predators, their toll can be enormous.  

In New Zealand’s Nelson Lakes National Park, the beech forests are thick with invasive yellowjackets by early autumn. They sip the sugary secretions produced by scale insects living on the trees, and will fight the bellbirds, tui, silvereyes and other birds for it, even slaughtering nest-bound chicks. The densities of their nests — up to 40 nests per hectare and 370 wasps per square-meter of tree trunk — are among the world’s highest.  

“When you walk through the forest, you should smell the sweetness of the honeydew and hear the birds,” says biologist Phil Lester of Te Herenga Waka – Victoria University of Wellington, who wrote about management strategies for invasive social wasps in the Annual Review of Entomology . “But with the wasp, you don’t hear the birdsong, you don’t smell the honeydew.” 

“They eat everything,” says ecologist Erin Wilson-Rankin of the University of California, Riverside, who has studied invasive social wasps for nearly 20 years. “They don’t specialize. They’ll eat caterpillars, aphids, flies, the whole gamut of arthropods.”  

People have tried just about everything to get rid of wasps: fire, boiling water, electricity, traps, poison and brute force. While many poisons do work, they can also harm native insects and other animals. New Zealand has suppressed yellowjacket populations in highly trafficked areas with a selective poison bait called Vespex, but they reinvade elsewhere. Recently, scientists there began an effort to control wasp numbers by releasing a predator: European hoverflies that parasitize the wasp nests . Other scientists are studying the wasps’ genes to identify other solutions. 

Nest destruction can kill hundreds of wasps at once, but it’s dangerous: Yellowjackets can squirt venom into an attacker’s eyes, and stings can be painful or life-threatening. Reiner Jahn, a research assistant for a landscape conservation association and a hornet-buster in Germany, describes the pain of a yellow-legged hornet as “digging a hot rusty knife into your flesh.”  

Nest busting  

On a hot afternoon in September, Jahn pulls up to a school in Viernheim, an industrial town east of the Rhine River. Kids run and jump in the playground, until a teacher ushers them away. High in a tree overhanging the soccer field is a caramel-colored, beach-ball-sized, yellow-legged hornet’s nest.  

A whiff of revenge hangs in the air as Jahn and his crew set up. Each is a beekeeper who has suffered honeybee colony losses from yellow-legged hornets, or knows someone who has. Jahn extends a telescopic pole fitted with a spray nozzle toward the nest. He jabs it and blows in a fine powder called diatomaceous earth as chunks of the nest tumble to the ground. Hornets stream out like air from a punctured balloon. 

Dusted with the white powder and unable to fly, the inch-long yellow-legged hornets wander through the grass and across the tarp. The crew picks through the nest debris. When a nest is attacked — whether by a predator or a human — the queen may escape, Jahn explains. Find her, and the work is done. This time, she’s unaccounted for. 

The trick to stopping a yellow-legged hornet invasion is to wreck the nests before hundreds of new queens fly out in the fall to establish their own nests. In 2023, Jahn destroyed 160 yellow-legged hornet’s nests in his home state of Hesse and 80 in a neighboring state. After a few years of nest-busting, he no longer believes that the yellow-legged hornet can be eradicated in Germany — the country may have waited too long to start removing nests. By mid-May, he’d already fielded calls for 19 new nests, compared with only two by the end of May last year.   

Back in Georgia, Bartlett has tracked down the source of the captured yellow-legged hornets. His genetic analysis shows that a single queen arrived from southern China, South Korea or Japan in late 2022. He believes the hornets found last year were the first American-born generation from the stowaway queen. Now, the second-generation has emerged. “We have been finding queens a little further out than we had hoped. But nothing near the distances they see in Europe,” says Bartlett. As of the end of April, the state had trapped and destroyed 21 queens.   

Bartlett sees the work as his duty to protect the beekeeping industry, but his hope is that the hornet won’t define his scientific career. Still, Bartlett knows he can’t relent. “If we don’t get rid of them, there is very little chance that I’m not going to become the yellow-legged hornet expert in the U.S.” 

This story was produced by Knowable Magazine , an independent journalistic endeavor from Annual Reviews. Sign up for the newsletter.

CEPS Faculty and Staff Honoured with 2024 Awards

Posted on Thursday, May 23rd, 2024

Photo of awards recipients standing side by side in Sumerlee Science Complex Atrium. Left to right: Dr. William Tam, Dr. Nagham Mohammad, Dr. Richard G. Zytner, Dr. Aicheng Che and Dr. Huiyan Li.

Five faculty and staff in the College of Engineering and Physical Sciences (CEPS) received the College’s annual awards, recognizing their excellence in core areas to the University of Guelph, including teaching, research and service.

“During their time at the University, these faculty and staff have shown outstanding dedication and commitment to providing a superior learning experience for our students and working environment for each other,” says Dr. Richard Zytner , interim dean CEPS. “Each of them is highly deserving of these awards.”

The CEPS awards consist of the Assistant Professor Research Excellence Award, Graduate Supervision Award, Undergraduate Supervision Award, Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching Award and Staff Excellence Award.

The awards were presented at a spring luncheon hosted by the dean. Award nominations were adjudicated by the College Awards Committee, which consists of one voting member from each of CEPS’s five academic units: Physics, Mathematics and Statistics, Engineering, Computer Science and Chemistry. The recipients for 2024 are:

The Assistant Professor Research Excellence Award is given out to a CEPS Assistant Professor who demonstrates enhanced research productivity and the potential for continued research program growth. Dr. Huiyan Li , School of Engineering, is this year’s recipient and has published 18 peer-reviewed papers in top-ranked, high-impact journals in chemistry and chemical engineering since joining U of G in 2020. Li has also successfully secured more than $500,000 in external funding for her interdisciplinary research, including an NSERC Discovery Grant, CFI-JELF grant, among other tri-agency funding.

The Excellence in Graduate Supervision Award is given out to a CEPS faculty member who exemplifies sustained excellence in graduate student supervision. They are a strong mentor and role model, providing a caring work environment for their students. Dr. Aicheng Chen , Department of Chemistry, receives the award this year. Chen has supervised or co-supervised 20 M.Sc. and 14 PhD students since joining U of G in 2017. Chen’s training philosophy is rooted in fostering an inclusive and engaging environment for students to learn and develop strong technical skills, while empowering them to realize their research potential and thrive professionally.

The Excellence in Undergraduate Research Supervision Award is given out to a CEPS faculty member who best exemplifies sustained excellence in the supervision of undergraduate student research or research-related activities. Dr. William Tam , Department of Chemistry, receives this year’s Undergraduate Research Supervision Award. Tam has supervised 117 undergraduate students over 25 years at U of G. Twenty-eight of these students are co-authors on Tam’s research paper, and 17 have been awarded NSERC or OGS graduate scholarships. Tam is known for creating an environment where students gain hands-on learning, and have the ability to make mistakes and learn from them. He offers guidance and aims to instill confidence in his students, along with insisting on a positive work environment.

The Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching Award for a faculty member who exemplifies sustained excellence in undergraduate teaching. This year’s Undergraduate Teaching Award recipient is Dr. Nagham Mohammad , Department of Mathematics and Statistics. Mohammad has a strong record of teaching excellence, improving curriculum and course delivery. She has overhauled core required courses to improve engagement, taking a skills-focused approach to courses such as MATH1080, along with implementing collaborative lab assignments and enabling a stronger feedback loop between teaching assistants and undergraduate students, among others.

The Staff Excellence Award is designed to recognize an exceptional contribution of a staff member towards fulfilling the College’s mission and mandate. This year’s recipient is Kyle Johnston , School of Computer Science (SOCS). Kyle has helped transform how SOCS supports its students and researchers with computing resources. He willingly shares his knowledge and seeks new and innovative ways of ensuring that the University’s computing school meets the necessary IT requirements of its community. Kyle is recognized for his passion, expertise and general enrichment to SOCS, along with his willingness to go above and beyond for students, faculty and other staff.

Congratulations to all the recipients!

Share this page

  • Share on Facebook
  • Share on Twitter
  • Share on LinkedIn
  • Print this page

News Archive

News topics.

  • Announcements
  • Awards & Achievements
  • Research Highlights
  • Student Awards
  • Student Feature

IMAGES

  1. [Guelph Chapter] Career Spotlight: Research & Development

    research jobs guelph

  2. International Student Undergraduate Research Assistantship (ISURA) at

    research jobs guelph

  3. The University of Guelph in Canada invites application for vacant (38

    research jobs guelph

  4. Technologist Jobs

    research jobs guelph

  5. University of Guelph, Careers and Opportunities, La Trobe University

    research jobs guelph

  6. Technologist Jobs

    research jobs guelph

VIDEO

  1. HBRC Educational Resources

  2. #clinicalresearch #freshers #ytshorts

  3. Being a Researcher Is the Best Job in the World

  4. Jobs in Clinical Research

  5. Study Chemistry at the University of Guelph

  6. IS YOUR JOB SAFE? The SECRET LIST of Jobs Threatened By AI

COMMENTS

  1. Research Jobs in Guelph, ON (with Salaries)

    Graduate Research Assistant - Phage Biology and Applications. Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada. Guelph, ON. $28.99-$37.53 an hour. Full-time + 1. The bacteriophage research program is focusing on understanding phage biology and using this information to develop novel phage-based biocontrol and detection…. Posted 3 days ago ·.

  2. 3,000+ Research jobs in Guelph, Ontario, Canada (571 new)

    Today's top 3,000+ Research jobs in Guelph, Ontario, Canada. Leverage your professional network, and get hired. New Research jobs added daily.

  3. 170 research Jobs in Guelph, ON, February 2024

    Search Research jobs in Guelph, ON with company ratings & salaries. 170 open jobs for Research in Guelph.

  4. 226 Researcher Jobs in Guelph, Ontario, Canada (17 new)

    Today's top 226 Researcher jobs in Guelph, Ontario, Canada. Leverage your professional network, and get hired. New Researcher jobs added daily.

  5. 25 Best research jobs in Guelph, ON (Hiring Now!)

    366 research jobs available in Guelph, ON. See salaries, compare reviews, easily apply, and get hired. New research careers in Guelph, ON are added daily on Workopolis.com. The low-stress way to find your next research job opportunity is on Workopolis. There are over 366 research careers in Guelph, ON waiting for you to apply!

  6. 20 Best research jobs in guelph, on (Hiring Now!)

    88 research jobs available in guelph, on. See salaries, compare reviews, easily apply, and get hired. New research careers in guelph, on are added daily on SimplyHired.com. The low-stress way to find your next research job opportunity is on SimplyHired. There are over 88 research careers in guelph, on waiting for you to apply!

  7. 58 Academic Research Jobs in Guelph, Ontario, Canada (5 new)

    Today's top 58 Academic Research jobs in Guelph, Ontario, Canada. Leverage your professional network, and get hired. New Academic Research jobs added daily.

  8. 23 New Lab Research Job Postings in Guelph, ON

    lab research jobs in Guelph, ON. Sort by: relevance - date. 23 jobs. Research Assistant. University of Guelph. Guelph, ON. Full-time +2. Monday to Friday. Easily apply: Applies general technical knowledge and skills to perform routine, standardized laboratory research techniques and procedures.

  9. 53 Research Services jobs in Guelph, Ontario, Canada

    Today's top 53 Research Services jobs in Guelph, Ontario, Canada. Leverage your professional network, and get hired. New Research Services jobs added daily.

  10. 128 research science jobs in Guelph, ON, May 2024

    Search Research science jobs in Guelph, ON with company ratings & salaries. 128 open jobs for Research science in Guelph.

  11. Research Opportunities

    The Office of Research oversees a $186 million research enterprise across seven colleges, our regional campus at Ridgetown, 15 research centres, and the University of Guelph/Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs Agreement. We are committed to supporting the research programs of University of Guelph faculty across all disciplines.

  12. 51 research biology jobs in Guelph, ON, April 2024

    Search Research biology jobs in Guelph, ON with company ratings & salaries. 51 open jobs for Research biology in Guelph.

  13. 39 Clinical trial research assistant jobs in Guelph, ON

    3.9. Clinical Research Project Assistant - Clinical Trials Support Unit (CTSU) Toronto. $57K - $69K (Glassdoor Est.) In collaboration with other members of the team, develop queries of databases to produce administrative and/or research related reports.…. Discover more.

  14. research guelph jobs in Guelph, ON

    Search 136 Research Guelph jobs now available in Guelph, ON on Indeed.com, the world's largest job site.

  15. Current Opportunities

    Vice President, Research and Innovation Office of Research 2023 12 20. Associate Vice President, Advancement 2023 11 23. Office / Clerical / Technical / Administrative. Pharmacy Technician #2024-0265 Ontario Veterinary College Health Sciences Centre 2024 05 15. Senior Laboratory Technician #2024-0237 Advanced Analysis Cente - Genomics Facility ...

  16. 169 Research Development jobs in Guelph, Ontario, Canada (11 new)

    Today's top 169 Research Development jobs in Guelph, Ontario, Canada. Leverage your professional network, and get hired. New Research Development jobs added daily.

  17. Office of Research

    The Office of Research oversees a $186 million research enterprise across seven colleges, our regional campus at Ridgetown, 15 research centres, and the University of Guelph/Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs Agreement. We are committed to supporting the research programs of University of Guelph faculty across all ...

  18. 24 Research assistant jobs in University of Guelph, ON

    People who searched for research assistant jobs in University of Guelph, ON also searched for research associate, research technician, graduate assistant, research specialist, program assistant, lab assistant, research intern, research coordinator, lab tech, lab technician. If you're getting few results, try a more general search term.

  19. Undergraduate Summer Research Opportunities

    Undergraduate Summer Research Opportunities. Full-time summer research positions are available for undergraduate students through four competitive and unique programs. Students gain valuable research experience while working under the supervision and mentorship of University of Guelph faculty. Visit the webpages below for full eligibility ...

  20. Bumblebee populations under threat as nests overheat due to climate

    As the world's bumblebee population continues to decline, new research from the University of Guelph is pointing to global warming as a major contributor to the demise of the critical pollinators.

  21. 27 research assistant jobs in Guelph, ON, May 2024

    27 Research assistant jobs in Guelph, ON. Most relevant. Johnson & Johnson. 4.1. Research Assistant (Co-op) R&D Analytical Team - (Sept 2024- May 2025) Guelph. Currently enrolled in a bachelor's degree program and eligible to complete a 4-8-month co-op term at our Kenvue, Guelph manufacturing location.…. Discover more.

  22. Experts work to fight spread of yellow-legged hornet in US

    Find her, and the work is done. This time, she's unaccounted for. The trick to stopping a yellow-legged hornet invasion is to wreck the nests before hundreds of new queens fly out in the fall to ...

  23. Undergraduate Research Assistantship (URA)

    These positions provide full-time employment during the summer months allowing students to save money to help with the cost of their next academic study period. The salary for a URA starts at $9,640 (based on $16.55/hr working 35 hrs/week for 16 weeks, plus 4% vacation pay).

  24. CEPS Faculty and Staff Honoured with 2024 Awards

    Posted on Thursday, May 23rd, 2024. Five faculty and staff receive College awards for their outstanding service. Left to right: Dr. William Tam, Dr. Nagham Mohammad, Dr. Richard G. Zytner, Dr. Aicheng Chen and Dr. Huiyan Li. Missing from photo: Kyle Johnston, Staff award recipient. Five faculty and staff in the College of Engineering and ...