Times Colonist

Washington captures first Asian giant hornet

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BLAINE, Washington — Washington state agricultur­e workers have have trapped their first Asian giant hornet.

The hornet was found July 14 in a bottle trap set north of Seattle near the Canadian border, and state entomologi­sts confirmed its identity Wednesday, according to the Washington State Department of Agricultur­e.

The Asian giant hornet, the world’s largest at five cemtimetre­s, can decimate entire hives of honeybees and deliver a painful sting to humans. Farmers in the northwest depend on those honeybees to pollinate many crops such as apples, blueberrie­s and cherries.

The recently-trapped hornet in Washington is the first found in a trap rather than in the environmen­t as the state’s five previous confirmed sightings were.

“This is encouragin­g because it means we know that the traps work,” Sven Spichiger, managing entomologi­st for the department said in a news release. “But it also means we have work to do.”

The state now plans to search for nests using infrared cameras and place additional traps that try to capture hornets alive. If they catch live hornets, the agricultur­e department will try to tag and track them back to their colony so the colony can be eradicated.

Officials hope to destroy any nests by mid-September, before the colony would begin creating new reproducin­g queens.

On Vancouver Island, the giant hornets were first spotted in the Nanaimo area last summer.

 ??  ?? The Asian giant hornet, the world’s largest at five centimetre­s, can decimate entire hives of honeybees and deliver a painful sting.
The Asian giant hornet, the world’s largest at five centimetre­s, can decimate entire hives of honeybees and deliver a painful sting.

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