“…The beetles inflict negligible damage to its host but, upon hatching, the larvae feed on pollen and honey, putrefying hive products as they simultaneously defecate leading to comb honey contamination and sometimes colony collapse in severe cases (Figure 1). In the past two decades, it has become an invasive pest of European honey bees in the Americas, Australia, and Asia (Ellis et al, 2002;Neumann & Elzen, 2004;Ellis & Hepburn, 2006;Spiewok & Neumann, 2006;Graham et al, 2011;Pirk & Neumann, 2013;Mustafa et al, 2014), and most recently Europe (Palmeri et al, 2015). The SHB has also been found in the nests of other Apidae members such as the bumble bee Bombus impatiens Cresson (Stanghellini et al, 2000;Spiewok & Neumann, 2006;Mustafa et al, 2014) and some neotropical meliponine bee species of the genera Trigona and Dactylurina in various parts of the world, such as Latin America and sub-Saharan Africa (Greco et al, 2010;Halcroft et al, 2011;Neumann et al, 2016;Nkoba et al, 2012;Peña et al, 2014;Anguilet et al, 2017).…”