B5 THE ASTORIAN • SATURDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2021 Giant hornets thrust entomologist into spotlight tree, the insect had never been confi rmed in the U.S. Refl ecting a few years later, Spichiger said the report “gave us a chance.” It was, however, the pest that got away. “We didn’t hit it hard enough,” Spichiger said. “We should have nuked the area.” If that sounds harsh, consider this: The spotted lanternfl y infestation grew from 174 square miles in 2016 to about 3,000 square miles in 2017, according to the Pennsylvania Depart- ment of Agriculture. In 2018, a Pennsylvania congressman complained the pest was “wreak- ing havoc” on agriculture in 13 counties. The U.S. Department of Agriculture announced it would spend $17.5 million to contain the bug. The pest continued to spread. Penn State researchers in late 2019 By DON JENKINS Capital Press It was not astonishing to Sven-Erik Spichiger that the Asian giant hor- net popped up in Washing- ton state. Shortly before the insect, sensationally dubbed the “murder hor- net,” was found near the U.S.-Canadian border in 2019, the Washington State Department of Agriculture printed a booklet on “inva- sive pests.” The rogues gallery included Vespa manda- rinia, the world’s larg- est hornet. The fearsome decapitators of honey bees had never been confi rmed in North America. But Spichiger, the agriculture department’s managing entomologist, was expect- ing them to arrive by ship. “The way our trade routes are set up, I’m sur- prised it didn’t happen before,” he said. The hornets that were found in British Columbia and northwest Washing- ton could have been stow- aways — or they could have escaped. “Asian giant hornets are a sought-after food source,” Spichiger said. “It’s possi- ble people brought them here on purpose. “You wonder whether somebody tried to get a colony going to enjoy them,” said Spichiger, who was tempted into trying raw hornet pupae. “It tastes like any other insect,” he said. Reluctant spokesman For two years, Spichiger, 49, has been the intro- verted but quotable sci- entist informing the pub- lic about the campaign to repel Asian giant hornets. He reported the mis- steps, victories, surprises and lucky breaks. He says he doesn’t relish the role he’s been thrust into, but likes that people are listen- ing and on-guard. So far, with the pub- lic’s help, Spichiger and colleagues, including fel- low department entomol- ogist Chris Looney, have found and destroyed four nests, all near each other in Whatcom County. Spichiger said in November that he was hopeful the hornets have been contained to a small area along the border. Murder hornets, however, estimated the potential economic damage. Worst- case, if the pest gets estab- lished, annual losses are projected to be $554 million. Spotted lanternfl ies spread by laying egg masses on the surface of items that can travel around the coun- try. The USDA says spot- ted lanternfl ies are now in 11 states, the farthest west being Indiana. Spichiger said he’s watching Cleveland, where spotted lanternfl ies were found in August. He said that he expects that once they hit Chicago, they will spread west on rail cars. “Once it gets here, we’re looking at managing it, living with it,” he said. By contrast, the Asian giant hornet “will never be the pest of a generation,” he said. “It’s just the one people are interested in.” Don Jenkins/Capital Press Washington State Department of Agriculture managing entomologist Sven-Erik Spichiger holds a tray of Asian giant hornet specimens. remain a story of national interest. “We expected people to be interested. We didn’t expect people to be this interested for this long,” he said. “We’re not used to people being interested in what we do.” Spichiger traces his interest in insects to the summer he was 8 and helped his cousin earn a Boy Scout merit badge by collecting green drag- onfl ies. He never stopped collecting. He earned a bachelor’s degree in entomology at Penn State University and a master’s degree in the same subject at Clemson University. A Pennsylvania native, Spichiger worked his way up to managing entomol- ogist at the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture. By 2018, he was attending lots of meetings and doing paperwork. A bug crisis arose while he was on jury duty, and his staff handled the prob- lem without him. That’s when he knew it was time for a change. Spichiger applied, as a lark, for an equivalent position in Washington. He was off ered the job, so he and his wife, Kuen Kuen, moved west, where the mountains and fi sh are bigger. “We feel like we’re on vacation every day,” he said. Spichiger said he became an entomologist for the “wondrous variety.” There’s a new infesta- tion of Japanese beetles to attack next spring in Yakima County. “Japanese beetles could be a disas- ter. It could be ho-hum,” Spichiger said. Spotted lanternfl y There’s another insect that Spichiger would never describe as humdrum. He says it “could be one the most harmful pests in our generation.” It’s the spotted lantern- fl y. There’s never been a credible sighting in Wash- ington, but Spichigher fought the pest in Pennsyl- vania, and he expects to do so again. “It is coming,” he said. In 2014, Spichiger, as Pennsylvania’s entomolo- gist, checked out a report of an unusual insect. He found hundreds of spot- ted lanternfl ies on Ailan- thus altissima , commonly known as tree of heaven. Spotted lanternfl ies pre- fer those trees, which are fast-growing, but they also like grapes, apples, Christ- mas trees and many other crops. 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