The Daily Courier

Family finds a live scorpion in bananas bought at Costco

Halifax shopper’s 11-year-old daughter spots scorpion squirming in plastic bag

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HALIFAX — A Halifax-based weatherman says he got more than he bargained for during a recent Costco trip — a live scorpion in his bag of bananas.

Nathan Coleman, a reporter for The Weather Network, says he was unloading groceries on Friday when his 11-year-old daughter spotted something squirming in a plastic bag.

Coleman says he dismissed the rustling until his mother put the bananas away and saw the scorpion.

“It was as scary as it was shocking,” Coleman said in an interview. “It’s just such a strange bug.”

He says he double-bagged the scorpion and drove to the Nova Scotia Museum of Natural History, where it was placed in alcohol and kept alongside other creatures who’ve arrived from tropical locations.

Andrew Hebda, the museum’s zoologist, said it’s the first such arrival he knows of where the museum has received a specimen from a banana shipment, but other scorpions have come into the province in fruit.

He said it is likely that a few of the potentiall­y dangerous arachnid arrive in the city each year.

“We call them hitchhiker­s . . . everything from snakes to frogs to spiders,” he said.

Hebda said so far he’s been able to classify the migrant from Guatemala as belonging to the general class of Buthids, a large family of scorpions which have a fat tail.

Though the chances are slim the average fruit shopper will run into similar creatures, the zoologist nonetheles­s suggests people take a moment to run their produce under a tap.

“If you get fruit from tropical areas, wash it off, as it can take off any insects and generally puts them into cold shock,” he said.

Hebda said the scorpion delivered to the museum was capable of delivering a fairly nasty sting, though he doesn’t think it would be lethal.

“Most of these invertebra­tes are quite shy and tend to avoid the big, hairy, screamy things like us,” he added.

Hebda said “on the positive side,” the arrival of the occasional scorpion is a sign of fewer chemicals being used on the fruit — in the past, heavy use of pesticides would have eliminated most unwanted visitors.

Hebda said he has a number of dead scorpions in his collection delivered by citizens over the years.

A spokesman for Costco says the chain is looking into the matter.

“We are aware of the incident and are investigat­ing,” wrote Ron Damiani, a spokesman for Costco, in an email.

Coleman says a warehouse manager has apologized to him, but he thinks the product should be pulled from the shelves.

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