Science Tracking the ‘Murder Hornet’: A Deadly Pest Has Reached North America - Japanese Giant Hornets may be establishing a foothold in the United States


Tracking the ‘Murder Hornet’: A Deadly Pest Has Reached North America
Sightings of the Asian giant hornet have prompted fears that the vicious insect could establish itself in the United States and devastate bee populations.

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“This is our window to keep it from establishing,” Chris Looney, a Washington State entomologist, said of the two-inch Asian giant hornet. He displayed a dead hornet on his jacket.
Credit...Ruth Fremson/The New York Times


By Mike Baker
  • May 2, 2020
  • Updated 1:30 p.m. ET
BLAINE, Wash. — In his decades of beekeeping, Ted McFall had never seen anything like it.

As he pulled his truck up to check on a group of hives near Custer, Wash., in November, he could spot from the window a mess of bee carcasses on the ground. As he looked closer, he saw a pile of dead members of the colony in front of a hive and more carnage inside — thousands and thousands of bees with their heads torn from their bodies and no sign of a culprit.

“I couldn’t wrap my head around what could have done that,” Mr. McFall said.

Only later did he come to suspect that the killer was what some researchers simply call the “murder hornet.”

With queens that can grow to two inches long, Asian giant hornets can use mandibles shaped like spiked shark fins to wipe out a honeybee hive in a matter of hours, decapitating the bees and flying away with the thoraxes to feed their young. For larger targets, the hornet’s potent venom and stinger — long enough to puncture a beekeeping suit — make for an excruciating combination that victims have likened to hot metal driving into their skin.

In Japan, the hornets kill up to 50 people a year. Now, for the first time, they have arrived in the United States.


Mr. McFall still is not certain that Asian giant hornets were responsible for the plunder of his hive. But two of the predatory insects were discovered last fall in the northwest corner of Washington State, a few miles north of his property — the first sightings in the United States.

Scientists have since embarked on a full-scale hunt for the hornets, worried that the invaders could decimate bee populations in the United States and establish such a deep presence that all hope for eradication could be lost.

“This is our window to keep it from establishing,” said Chris Looney, an entomologist at the Washington State Department of Agriculture. “If we can’t do it in the next couple of years, it probably can’t be done.”

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The members of Ted McFall’s beehive near Custer, Wash., had their heads torn from their bodies.
Credit...Ted McFall


On a cold morning in early December, two and a half miles to the north of Mr. McFall’s property, Jeff Kornelis stepped on his front porch with his terrier-mix dog. He looked down to a jarring sight: “It was the biggest hornet I’d ever seen.”

The insect was dead, and after inspecting it, Mr. Kornelis had a hunch that it might be an Asian giant hornet. It did not make much sense, given his location in the world, but he had seen an episode of the YouTube personality Coyote Peterson getting a brutal sting from one of the hornets.

Beyond its size, the hornet has a distinctive look, with a cartoonishly fierce face featuring teardrop eyes like Spider-Man, orange and black stripes that extend down its body like a tiger, and broad, wispy wings like a small dragonfly.

Mr. Kornelis contacted the state, which came out to confirm that it was indeed an Asian giant hornet. Soon after, they learned that a local beekeeper in the area had also found one of the hornets.

Dr. Looney said it was immediately clear that the state faced a serious problem, but with only two insects in hand and winter coming on, it was nearly impossible to determine how much the hornet had already made itself at home.

Over the winter, state agriculture biologists and local beekeepers got to work, preparing for the coming season. Ruthie Danielsen, a beekeeper who has helped organize her peers to combat the hornet, unfurled a map across the hood of her vehicle, noting the places across Whatcom County where beekeepers have placed traps.

“Most people are scared to get stung by them,” Ms. Danielsen said. “We’re scared that they are going to totally destroy our hives.”

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Ruthie Danielsen noted the places across Whatcom County where beekeepers have placed hornet traps.
Credit...Ruth Fremson/The New York Times


Adding to the uncertainty — and mystery — were some other discoveries of the Asian giant hornet across the border in Canada.


In November, a single hornet was seen in White Rock, British Columbia, perhaps 10 miles away from the discoveries in Washington State — likely too far for the hornets to be part of the same colony. Even earlier, there had been a hive discovered on Vancouver Island, across a strait that probably was too wide for a hornet to have crossed from the mainland.

Crews were able to track down the hive on Vancouver Island. Conrad Bérubé, a beekeeper and entomologist in the town of Nanaimo, was assigned to exterminate it.

He set out at night, when the hornets would be in their nest. He put on shorts and thick sweatpants, then his bee suit. He donned Kevlar braces on his ankles and wrists.

But as he approached the hive, he said, the rustling of the brush and the shine of his flashlight awakened the colony. Before he had a chance to douse the nest with carbon dioxide, he felt the first searing stabs in his leg — through the bee suit and underlying sweatpants.

“It was like having red-hot thumbtacks being driven into my flesh,” he said. He ended up getting stung at least seven times, some of the stings drawing blood.

Jun-ichi Takahashi, a researcher at Kyoto Sangyo University in Japan, said the species had earned the “murder hornet” nickname there because its aggressive group attacks can expose victims to doses of toxic venom equivalent to that of a venomous snake; a series of stings can be fatal.


The night he got stung, Mr. Bérubé still managed to eliminate the nest and collect samples, but the next day, his legs were aching, as if he had the flu. Of the thousands of times he has been stung in his lifetime of work, he said, the Asian giant hornet stings were the most painful.

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Beehives at Ms. Danielsen’s home in Birch Bay.
Credit...Ruth Fremson/The New York Times


After collecting the hornet in the Blaine area, state officials took off part of a leg and shipped it to an expert in Japan. A sample from the Nanaimo nest was sent as well.

A genetic examination, concluded over the past few weeks, determined that the nest in Nanaimo and the hornet near Blaine were not connected, said Telissa Wilson, a state pest biologist, meaning there had probably been at least two different introductions in the region.

Dr. Looney went out on a recent day in Blaine, carrying clear jugs that had been made into makeshift traps; typical wasp and bee traps available for purchase have holes too small for the Asian giant hornet. He filled some with orange juice mixed with rice wine, others had kefir mixed with water, and a third batch was filled with some experimental lures — all with the hope of catching a queen emerging to look for a place to build a nest.

He hung them from trees, geo-tagging each location with his phone.

In a region with extensive wooded habitats for hornets to establish homes, the task of finding and eliminating them is daunting. How to find dens that may be hidden underground? And where to look, given that one of the queens can fly many miles a day, at speeds of up to 20 miles per hour?

The miles of wooded landscapes and mild, wet climate of western Washington State make it an ideal location for the hornets to spread.

In the coming months, Dr. Looney said, he and others plan to place hundreds more traps that could catch worker hornets that would start becoming active over the summer. State officials have mapped out the plan in a grid, starting in Blaine and moving outward.

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The entomologist Chris Looney setting makeshift traps for the hornet in an industrial park in Blaine.
Credit...Ruth Fremson/The New York Times


The buzz of activity inside a nest of Asian giant hornets can keep the inside temperature up to 86 degrees, so the trackers are also exploring using thermal imaging to examine the forest floors. Later, they may also try other advanced tools that could track the signature hum the hornets make in flight.

If a hornet does get caught in a trap, Dr. Looney said, there are plans to possibly use radio-frequency identification tags to monitor where it goes — or simply attach a small streamer and then follow the hornet as it returns to its nest.

While most bees would be unable to fly with a disruptive marker attached, that is not the case with the Asian giant hornet. It is big enough to handle the extra load.
 
Hornets are cruel and efficient. Not even purple drank can sate their bloodlust.
To fully appreciate just how efficient hornets are, consider that adult worker hornets don't eat. They literally cannot; their bodies are too scrawny and streamlined to support a proper digestive system.

The adults spend all day hunting down and killing any bug that's edible, and they bring every kill back to the colony. The kills are then butchered, chewed up, and fed to the larvae. The larvae secrete nutrient-rich saliva for the adults to drink, which is their only sustenance. This allows the adults to dedicate all of their energy to maintaining the nest, expanding the nest, and killing things. Proper reproductive/digestive organs are unnecessary dead weight, so the adult workers don't have any.

Nature's pretty awesome like that.
 
To fully appreciate just how efficient hornets are, consider that adult worker hornets don't eat. They literally cannot; their bodies are too scrawny and streamlined to support a proper digestive system.

The adults spend all day hunting down and killing any bug that's edible, and they bring every kill back to the colony. The kills are then butchered, chewed up, and fed to the larvae. The larvae secrete nutrient-rich saliva for the adults to drink, which is their only sustenance. This allows the adults to dedicate all of their energy to maintaining the nest, expanding the nest, and killing things. Proper reproductive/digestive organs are unnecessary dead weight, so the adult workers don't have any.

Nature's pretty awesome like that.
They are peak Asian.
 
Everything I am learning about European Honeybees tells me that they are too dumb to live on our continent. Remind me why I should be worried about them again? Don't say pollination. We have native non-stupid bees to handle that.
I do agree that honeybees aren't integral to pollination. Even mosquitoes pollinate; when they're not sucking blood they're sucking nectar.
The problem is industrial pollination. bees, in the US at least, are transported across vast distances to pollinate huge fruit and nut plantations that either have no natural pollinators, or are in areas where native pollinators are too sparse to cover the huge areas involved, and consist of plant monocultrures that can't sustain colonies long-term. Bees are transported between different plantations as they come into flower. If bees die off, so does california's almond industry and florida's OJ production.

It's not often discussed, but this constant transport is probably the reason for CCD. The vast majority of cases occur in the United States, and other nations and regions where bee transport for pollination is a routine part of agricultural practice.
 
hornets are the niggas of the insect world

This really is true. For some reason, Blacks have an overwhelming urge, when confronted, to charge people suicidally, even if it's directly into gunfire. Countless examples of them getting shot because some dude confronted them and they ran into his gunfire in an attempt to beat him down with their firsts.

Likewise, hornets will attack people for no reason and with complete disregard for their own safety.

Better than those ultra rare fucking scorpions....

 
Killer bees, or Africanized bees are fucking scary. They look not far off usual European honey bees, but they are nasty as fuck...
Only encountered them once, but the weird thing is they look just like normal honey bees, who will just ignore you unless you seriously mess with them...

THOSE FUCKERS JUST GO FULL ATTACK MODE IF YOU LOOK AT THEM FUNNY AND THEN CALL ALL THEIR MATES IN FOR ROUND 2.

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It wouldn't be the first time Africans were imported into America to improve the economy.
 
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