The hornet has landed: Scientists combat new honeybee killer in US
The hornet has landed: Scientists combat new honeybee killer in US

arstechnica.com
The hornet has landed: Scientists combat new honeybee killer in US

The hornet has landed: Scientists combat new honeybee killer in US
The hornet has landed: Scientists combat new honeybee killer in US
Apparently this is Vespa velutina, the Asian hornet. I thought it was Vespa mandarina, the Asian giant hornet, which is considerably larger, and also bad news for the European honeybee.
We had a small infestation of the latter a couple years ago on the West Coast that we think is gone. Was in the news for a while.
EDIT: Huh. Reading about it after the event, that sounds really weird. Apparently there were three completely-genetically-different populations -- not from the same places in Asia -- discovered that were all introduced at about the US-Canadian border at about the same time. That seems unlikely to be a coincidence. I wonder if that could be an intentional transport and release? Like, it'd harm American agriculture quite a lot if that thing started spreading, as it'd mess up European honeybees being used as pollinators. It'd be a very low-cost biological attack.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asian_giant_hornet