A8 BAKER CITY HERALD • THuRsDAY, MAY 26, 2022 NATION Scientists will set 1,000 traps for murder hornets this year BY NICHOLAS K. GERANIOS Associated Press SPOKANE, Wash. — Scientists will set about 1,000 traps this year in their quest to wipe out the Asian gi- ant hornet in Washington, the state Department of Agriculture said Tuesday, May 24. Scientists believe the hornets, first detected in the Pacific Northwest state in 2019, are confined in What- com County, which is located on the Canadian border north of Seattle. “We are doing pretty good right now,” said Sven-Erik Spichiger, who is leading the fight to eradicate the hornets for the state Department of Agriculture. “We know about where the nests are located in What- com County.” The insects are the world’s largest hornets, with queens reaching up to 2 inches (5 centimeters) long. They are considered invasive in North America for their ability to kill other bee and hornet species, which is how they got the nickname “murder hornets.” Hornets caught in traps help sci- entists find the location of nests. The state eradicated three nests last year, all near the town of Blaine, Wash- ington, and there have been no con- firmed reports of Asian giant hornet nests so far this year, Spichiger said. Most of the traps will be set in northern Whatcom County, but a few will be set in the city of Belling- ham, he said. The agency is also encouraging residents to set their own traps, to cover more ground. The hornets will not be consid- ered eradicated until Washington has gone three full years with no detec- tions, the agency said. The first con- firmed detection of an Asian giant hornet in Washington was made in December 2019. Washington State Department of Agriculture-TNS A dead Asian giant hornet (Vespa mandarinia), or “murder hornet.” Spichiger said the Entomological Society of America is also working to establish an official name for the in- sect. Asian giant hornet, or the popu- lar nickname murder hornet, are not official names, he said. The hornets can also deliver a painful sting, which can result in death if a person is stung repeat- edly. Asian giant hornets rarely attack humans unless provoked. About 30 to 50 people die annually from Asian giant hornet stings in Japan, one of their native habitats. Meanwhile, hornets, wasps and bees typically found in the United States kill an average of 62 people a year, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has said. The battle to prevent the Asian gi- ant hornet, an apex predator, from establishing a foothold in North America is being fought mostly in Whatcom County, Washington, and the nearby Fraser Valley of Brit- ish Columbia. Whatcom County is about 55 miles (88 kilometers) south of Vancouver, British Columbia. Another effort is underway to de- termine exactly where in Asia these hornets came from, to try and learn how they are getting across the Pa- cific Ocean, scientists said. The the- ory is they are crossing on cargo ships, officials have said. Hornet queens tend to emerge from winter quarters in the spring and establish nests to birth worker hornets. The hornets start attacking and destroying beneficial honey bees later in the year, eating the bees for protein as they raise more hornets. A small group of Asian giant hor- nets can kill an entire honey bee hive in a matter of hours. The honey bees pollinate many of the crops in Wash- ington’s multibillion-dollar agricul- ture industry. US releases study about new Idaho test nuclear reactor BY KEITH RIDLER Associated Press BOISE — U.S. officials have re- leased an environmental study for a proposed nuclear test reactor to be built in eastern Idaho that back- ers say is needed to revamp the nation’s fading nuclear power in- dustry by developing safer fuel and power plants. The U.S. Department of Energy earlier this month released the envi- ronmental impact statement for the Versatile Test Reactor that would be the first new test reactor built in the U.S. in decades. Scientists have said it could help lead to new nuclear re- actors and reduce the use of fossil fuels blamed for global warming. The environmental impact state- ment noted that the reactor would produce spent nuclear fuel beyond 2035, going past a deadline the En- ergy Department has with Idaho concerning spent nuclear fuel at the site. The document states that the Energy Department would explore possible approaches with Idaho re- garding that issue. The document also said that new structures would cover about 25 acres and produce spent fuel that would be treated and packaged at the site and placed on a spent fuel pad pending shipment off the site. Energy Department officials have praised the project. “VTR will provide U.S. research- ers from industry, academia, and our national laboratories with a critical tool for developing trans- formational technologies that will expand nuclear energy’s contribu- tion to abundant, carbon-free en- ergy,” Kathryn Huff, assistant sec- retary for the Energy Department’s Office of Nuclear Energy, said in a statement. She added: “VTR’s contribution to the fight against climate change begins with our commitment to de- signing, constructing, and operat- ing the VTR in a way that protects the environment and nearby com- munities.” Federal officials have said the pro- posed test reactor would help create new and safer fuels, materials and reactors being developed by civilian companies in the U.S. About 20% of the nation’s energy comes from about 100 nuclear power plants. The reactor would give the nation a dedicated “fast-neutron-spectrum” testing capability. Such reactors are called fast reactors. The advantage of such a test reactor, scientists say, is that fast neutrons have a higher energy level and speed the testing of materials, fuels and instruments needed in a new wave of planned commercial nuclear reactors. The disadvantage of such reactors, other scientists have said, is that they are cooled with harder to control liq- uid sodium and fueled by plutonium, increasing potential nuclear terror- ism risks because plutonium can be used to make nuclear weapons. Crit- ics also say they produce waste even more hazardous and difficult to dis- pose of than conventional reactors. U.S. officials have said Russia, China and India already have such test reactors. Plans call for building the re- actor at the Energy Department’s 890-square-mile site that includes the Idaho National Laboratory by the end of 2026. Construction of the proposed reactor depends on fund- ing from Congress. Scientists at the Idaho National Laboratory earlier this year com- pleted a rare overhaul of the Energy Department’s Advanced Test Reac- tor, one of the world’s most powerful nuclear test reactors. And in 2018, the Energy Depart- ment restarted the Transient Test Reactor at the Idaho National Lab- oratory to test new nuclear fuels. That facility had been on standby since 1994. What is monkeypox and where is it spreading? BY MARIA CHENG Associated Press LONDON — Health au- thorities in Europe, North America, Israel and Australia have identified more than 100 cases of monkeypox in recent days. Officials around the world are keeping watch for more cases because, for the first time, the rare disease appears to be spreading among people who didn’t travel to Africa, where monkeypox is endemic. They stress, however, that the risk to the general population is low. What is monkeypox? Monkeypox is a virus that originates in wild animals like rodents and primates, and oc- casionally jumps to people. It belongs to the same virus fam- ily as smallpox. Most human cases have been in central and west Africa and outbreaks have been relatively limited. The illness was first identi- fied by scientists in 1958 when there were two outbreaks of a “pox-like” disease in research monkeys — thus the name monkeypox. The first known human infection was in 1970, in a young boy in a remote part of Congo. Presumptive case reported in Seattle area SEATTLE (AP) — A “presump- tive” case of monkeypox is being investigated in the Seattle area, local health officials said Mon- day, May 23. Dr. Jeff Duchin, health officer at Public Health – Seattle & King County, said at a news confer- ence Monday afternoon the case was in an adult male who had travelled internationally in the last month to a country that had reported monkeypox cases. Duchin said initial testing was completed Monday at a state laboratory. A test to confirm the case will be done by federal of- ficials. The person was isolating and was not considered a risk to oth- ers, Duchin said. “This individual was not hos- pitalized and is recovering at home,” he said, adding the per- “This may just be unlucky that (monkeypox) happened to get into this one particu- lar community first,” said Dr. Jake Dunning, an infectious diseases researcher at the Uni- versity of Oxford, who is also involved in treating cases in London. “It’s just that they are What caused this latest a community and by having outbreak? Health officials are still in- sex with each other, that is how it’s spreading,” he said. vestigating, but a top adviser Other experts warn the dis- to the World Health Organi- zation said this week that the ease could spread more widely if measures aren’t taken to leading theory is that mon- keypox was likely spread after stop the outbreak. “Infectious diseases don’t sexual activity at two recent care about borders or social raves in Europe. networks. Some groups may Dr. David Heymann, who chairs WHO’s expert advisory have a greater chance of ex- group on infectious hazards, posure right now, but by no said monkeypox can spread means is the current risk of when there is close contact exposure to monkeypox” ex- with someone already in- clusive to men who have sex fected with the disease, and with men, said the CDC’s Dr. that “it looks like sexual con- John Brooks. tact has now amplified that transmission.” What are the symptoms and Authorities in countries in- how is it treated? cluding Britain, Spain, Ger- Most monkeypox patients many and Portugal say most experience only fever, body of the known cases in Europe aches, chills and fatigue. Peo- have been among men who ple with more serious illness have sex with men, but experts may develop a rash and le- emphasize that anyone can be sions on the face and hands infected through close contact that can spread to other parts with a sick person, their cloth- of the body. ing or bedsheets. Most people recover within Scientists say it will be diffi- about two to four weeks with- cult to determine whether the out needing to be hospital- spread is being driven by sex ized. Monkeypox can be fatal or merely close contact. for up to 6% of cases and is thought to be more severe in Why are most of the current children. Smallpox vaccines are effec- infections outside africa in men who have sex with men? tive against monkeypox and It’s unclear, but the disease anti-viral drugs are also being is no more likely to infect gay developed. and bisexual men than any- The European Centre for one else. Disease Prevention and Con- son was cooperating with local health authorities. Health officials do not believe there is a high risk to the public. Monkeypox is rarely identi- fied outside of Africa. Duchin said four cases have been con- firmed in the United States. To date, the World Health Or- ganization has recorded more than 90 cases of monkeypox in a dozen countries, including Can- ada, Spain, Israel, France, Swit- zerland, the U.S. and Australia. Although the disease be- longs to the same virus family as smallpox, its symptoms are milder. People usually recover within two to four weeks with- out needing to be hospitalized, but the disease occasionally is deadly. Health officials say most of the known cases in Europe have been among men who have sex with men, but anyone can be infected through close contact with a sick person, their clothing or bedsheets. trol recommended all sus- pected cases be isolated and that high-risk contacts be offered a smallpox vaccine. The U.K. is offering high-risk contacts the smallpox vaccine and recommending anyone who might be infected to iso- late until they recover. The U.S. has 1,000 doses of a vaccine approved for the prevention of monkeypox and smallpox, plus more than 100 million doses of an old- er-generation smallpox vac- cine in a government stock- pile, officials said. How worrying is this outbreak? Any outbreak of an emerg- ing virus is concerning, but most of the cases have been mild and there have been no deaths so far. Monkeypox also requires very close contact to spread, so it is not likely to prompt big waves of disease like COVID-19, which can be transmitted in the air by peo- ple with no symptoms. Still, Britain’s Health Se- curity Agency has said it ex- pects to see new infections “on a daily basis” and WHO’s Europe director warned that the summer season of festi- vals and parties could spread the disease. Many of the cases being identified have no links to previous infections, sug- gesting the virus is already spreading widely. On Tuesday, Germany’s Health Minister Karl Lauter- bach said the outbreak “is not the beginning of a new pan- demic” but needed to be con- tained quickly. How many monkeypox cases are there typically? The World Health Orga- nization estimates there are thousands of monkeypox in- fections in about a dozen Af- rican countries every year. Most are in Congo, which re- ports about 6,000 cases annu- ally, and Nigeria, with about 3,000 cases a year. In the past, isolated cases of monkeypox have been spotted outside Africa, in- cluding in the U.S. and Brit- ain. The cases were mostly linked to travel in Africa or contact with animals from ar- eas where the disease is more common. In 2003, 47 people in six U.S. states had confirmed or probable cases. They caught the virus from pet prairie dogs that been housed near imported small mammals from Ghana. 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