Friday, February 17, 2023

A look back on 2022: Drones and hornets

WSDA talks to colleagues and media about
the potential drone use for hornet tracking.
By Amber Betts
WSDA Communications

While we look back on 2022, I’d be remiss to only take a peek from a bird’s-eye view. Some of the work our agency is tasked with involves protecting agriculture by getting rid of and keeping invasive pests out of the state.

Since 2019, our teams have been tracking and removing northern giant hornet (NGH) nests and have garnered lots of experience in the art of nest removal. From visiting South Korea to learn more to removing four nests and learning all the ins and outs of this process, one thing remains true: in Washington state, these hornets have given our hornet trackers a run for their money.

When we found a northern giant hornet, we would radio tag it, and follow that hornet back to the nest.

Trekking through the woodlands of northern Whatcom County proved to be difficult when the NGH trackers began to find nests deep in the woods in tree cavities, often several feet off the ground. The scientific literature suggests that in native environments, NGH typically nests underground. However, in Washington, hornet nests were often located in dense forests with hard-to trek of lands. This made it hard to follow a hornet back to its nest.

These obstacles slowed tracking in two ways; first by requiring ground tracking personnel to cut their way through heavy blackberry growth with machetes, and second by the forest itself interfering with the range the tag’s radio signal could be detected. These difficulties were compounded by the handheld tracking units being limited to detecting a single signal, which was a shortcoming when multiple tagged hornets were in an area at the same time.

Unmanned Aerial Systems

Our tracking teams decided to incorporate unmanned aerial systems (UAS) equipped with radio telemetry hardware to aid in future tracking operations. The first step was identifying if it would be useful in the program. While the program drones haven’t officially taken flight, as soon as the government policy is written and finalized, the sky’s the limit.

WSDA hornet trackers say these drones will be beneficial in rapidly locating an area where a tagged hornet is located. We believe it will also allow them to follow a highly mobile, tagged hornet from above the forest canopy, to cut down on signal interference from the forest itself, and to enable the ground team to track multiple tag frequencies simultaneously in real time.

Speed and efficiency

Speed and efficiency is critical to any eradication effort. While locating the nests via radio tagged northern giant hornets will invariably require the presence of a ground crew with handheld radio telemetry receivers, the aerial tracking system will both increase the efficiency of the tracking operation and reduce safety risks to personnel in certain difficult field conditions.

Flying into the future

Our team is hopeful that as soon as the policies are completed, our hornet tracking abilities can have the takeoff we’ve been dreaming of. Keep an eye on our blog for more on this in the coming months.