The Borneo Post (Sabah)

First ever nest of Asian giant hornets found in US

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LOS ANGELES: After months of meticulous tracking, authoritie­s in the western US state of Washington on Friday said they had uncovered the first ever nest of the deadly Asian giant hornet in the country.

The nest was found on Thursday by Washington State Department of Agricultur­e (WSDA) entomologi­sts on a property in Blaine, near the border with Canada, the agency said in a statement.

It added that an attempt to eradicate the nest of wasps – the world’s largest hornet species also known as the “murder hornet” – would take place Saturday.

“The successful detection of a nest comes after a WSDA trapper collected two live Asian giant hornets on Oct 21 (Wednesday), caught in a new type of trap the agency had placed in the area,” the statement said.

“Two more hornets, also living, were found in another trap the morning of Oct 22 when WSDA staff arrived in the area to tag the previously trapped hornets with radio trackers and follow one back to its nest,” it added.

Scientists in the state have been actively searching for the Asian giant hornet since the first such insect was detected in December 2019 and after one of the wasps was trapped in July in Whatcom County, where Blaine is located. Several more of the invasive pest not native to the US were subsequent­ly caught, all in the same region.

The WSDA believes there was a good chance that there are more nests and “stopping this cold is very crucial,” said Sven Spichiger, an entomologi­st with WSDA, during a press conference Friday afternoon.

“If it becomes establishe­d, this hornet will have negative impacts on the environmen­t, economy, and public health of Washington State,” the WSDA said.

It is unclear how the wasps – which have orange and black markings and are nearly five centimetre­s in length – arrived in the US.

Scientists warn that unless the insect is eliminated in the next couple years, it could spread in North America and become permanentl­y establishe­d.

The hornets, which are native to East Asia and Japan, usually don’t attack people but they are known for decimating honeybee colonies. — AFP

 ??  ?? File photo shows a bottle containing orange juice and rice cooking wine is set as a trap by Jenni Cena, pest biologist and trapping supervisor from the Washington State Department of Agricultur­e, in an effort to catch Asian Giant Hornets, also known as murder hornets, in Bellingham, Washington.
File photo shows a bottle containing orange juice and rice cooking wine is set as a trap by Jenni Cena, pest biologist and trapping supervisor from the Washington State Department of Agricultur­e, in an effort to catch Asian Giant Hornets, also known as murder hornets, in Bellingham, Washington.
 ??  ?? A sample specimen of a dead Asian Giant Hornet from Japan. — AFP photos
A sample specimen of a dead Asian Giant Hornet from Japan. — AFP photos

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