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17060


Date: May 03, 2020 at 14:06:57
From: Redhart, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Asian Murder hornets

URL: https://www.vox.com/2020/5/3/21245612/murder-hornets-asian-giant-hornet-bees


The Asian giant hornet, a.k.a. the Murder Hornet, has
arrived. Bees beware.
The arrival of the invasive species is yet another
threat to beleaguered bees in the United States

By Umair Irfan May 3, 2020, 12:20pm EDT

A giant, bee-killing insect dubbed the “murder hornet”
is making inroads in the United States, threatening
crops that depend on pollination, and humans who may
get in its way.

The Asian giant hornet, Vespa mandarinia, is native to
places like Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan, but was
detected in Washington state late last year. Canadian
officials also found the hornet in British Columbia in
August.

The menacing orange-and-black hornets have workers
that can grow an inch and a half long and queens that
get up to two inches in length. They have a painful
sting that can be fatal to humans — if they are
allergic — and unlike most bees, hornets can sting
more than once. Despite their name, however, people
have little to fear from them: The British Columbia
Ministry of Agriculture said that they “are not
interested in humans, pets and large animals.”

Instead, the main concern is what these hornets do to
honeybees. With its spiked, dagger-like mandibles, an
Asian giant hornet can decapitate 40 honeybees per
minute. Within hours, a swarm of these invasive
hornets can purge a beehive.

This voracious appetite for a critical pollinator
poses a threat to key crops in the Pacific Northwest,
where commercial beekeepers often rent their hives out
to farmers growing crops like blueberries and
raspberries.

The Washington State Department of Agriculture is now
asking the public to report any findings of the hornet
to keep track of its spread. It’s not clear how the
hornets crossed the Pacific Ocean, but experts think
they may have stowed away on a container ship or may
have been deliberately imported as an ingredient in
homemade purported performance enhancers.

The arrival of the murder hornet is just the latest
woe for bees in the United States
Bees support about $20 billion worth of US agriculture
each year, but are facing population declines around
the world. Since 2006, US beekeepers have lost nearly
a third of their colonies each year. Bees are under
pressure from pesticides, habitat loss, disease, and
invasive species like the Asian giant hornet. Several
of these factors are likely at play in the rise of
colony collapse disorder, which can leave bee colonies
with no adult bees aside from the queen.

In Asia, bees do have a defense mechanism against the
Asian giant hornet, however. They can swarm a scout
hornet in the hive, forming a ball around the invader.
Then the bees vibrate, causing the hornet to heat up,
while carbon dioxide builds up inside the ball. The
scout suffocates and dies, preventing it from relaying
the coordinates of the hive to the rest of its swarm.

But it’s not clear whether bees in North America know
how to deploy this technique since the hornet is a new
threat. And with all the stresses bees already face,
hives can only hold out for so long.


Responses:
[17066] [17064] [17061] [17063] [17062]


17066


Date: May 05, 2020 at 07:49:42
From: Alan, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Asian Murder hornets



Responses:
None


17064


Date: May 04, 2020 at 09:33:52
From: Sunshine, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Asian Murder hornets


Yikes !
If they are THAT big, can you imagine what humongous size their nests are?
Sweet little bees dont have a chance against these critters.


Responses:
None


17061


Date: May 03, 2020 at 14:22:37
From: Eve, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Asian Murder hornets




I saw something about that last night but not a real image of
it...that thing is a beast of a hornet...looks like it came from
the underworld....another grief.


Responses:
[17063] [17062]


17063


Date: May 03, 2020 at 14:33:45
From: Redhart, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Asian Murder hornets


yeah...nasty looking critters. Glad it doesn't like
humans, but real bad news for bees.



Responses:
None


17062


Date: May 03, 2020 at 14:23:22
From: Eve, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Asian Murder hornets




it's a cannibal critter...ugh..


Responses:
None


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