Post details: Invasion of the giant hornets... or is it?


Invasion of the giant hornets... or is it?
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There's a buzz going about... and it's created by a load of hornets. Regular readers will know about the Asian Giant Hornet, Vespa mandarinia, which has been causing a bit of debate. Quite a few people emailed The Ranger or posted to the blog, worried (or interested) that they might have found a specimen of V. mandarinia in their house or garden.

One of these was Ranger reader Dave Wall, who said:

I have just seen a massive hornet in my garden. It was hovering just above an ants nest. It only stayed around for a few seconds before flying off. I have seen ordinary hornets fairly commonly in and around our house, but nothing like this. It was not the European Hornet ! I would estimate it to be about 60mm in length. It's bright yellow head and huge abdomen were the most striking features. We are in a very rural fruit growing area in Warwickshire.

The Ranger rather optimistically requested photos, and splendidly, Dave was able to comply. A few days later he gamely captured one of the beasts and took some great photographs - here's one:

European hornet (c) Dave Wall
Dave Wall's hornet - the ruler has been added in from another part of the photo, but the scale is correct.

We can see from Dave's ruler that the body length of this creature is a somewhat less scary 35mm, which is well within the range of the European hornet V. crabro. Indeed, this is no Asian monster but our native European hornet, and as such is little to worry about. If you need convincing perhaps the simplest way to tell them apart is the colour of the thorax (the bit of the body between the head and the abdomen) which is very clearly brown in UK hornets (less so in other European races), but definitely black in the Asian one. This one, as you see, is quite gingery-brown.

This is a worker although it's on the big side. Queens and workers have seven segments to the abdomen, whereas males have only six. The queen can be up to 50mm in length, so quite possibly that's what Dave saw the first time. The European hornet is actually less aggressive than the common wasp, and although it looks fearsome, is less likely to sting. And although it will nest in urban and suburban situations, it prefers the countryside. So you don't need to be too worried, if you leave them alone they will probably not bother you and go away.

Interestingly, it's not just The Ranger who has had these enquiries. The Ranger's correspondent Stuart Hine, who is manager of the Natural History Museum's Insect Identification Service, explains more:

The Insect Identification Service at the Natural History Museum is receiving unprecedented enquires from the public about the insect. Most people are concerned that they are seeing the giant Oriental hornet or the Asian 'killer' hornet, probably due to recent media attention these species have received. But this is not the case. What people are seeing are queens of our native European hornet, Vespa crabro, our largest species of social wasp. Queen hornets are formidable looking insects with a body length of up to five centimetres.

In the UK emerging queens are not usually seen until about early-mid May. However, the unseasonable mild spring we have experienced this year appears to have roused them from their slumber earlier with the first sightings in early March.

You can also see a great video of Stuart talking about this, with some (dead) examples of both the European and Asian hornets.

15 comments so far, see them and add yours here!

Posted on 1st June 2007 at 11 12 pm
by The Virtual Ranger
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Categories: Wildlife & countryside news and comment
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Comments:

Comment from: Ruth D'Alessandro Email
Interesting about the size of the queen hornets. We had emerging queen wasps this year that were not far off the size of a worker hornet...
PermalinkPermalink 02/06/07 @ 08:36

 

Comment from: Rob Email
We have a hornets nest in the eaves of our house. Not a particularly large nest but there are quite a few hornets buzzing around. Is it advisable to have the nest removed and are hornets protected in the U.K. - our local council website states that they are uncommon and should not be destroyed (the hornets, not the council!). That's fine by me but I'm more concerned about whether they will damage the timber in the house - I have also found dead specimens in the loft?

The Ranger responds: unless your timbers are already rotten the hornets won't significantly damage them. And the council is right- they're uncommon, and pretty much harmless so no need to poison them unless you really feel strongly about it. However, if you do, it wouldn't be illegal as they are not legally protected.
PermalinkPermalink 03/07/07 @ 08:54

 

Comment from: Ruth D'Alessandro Email
Mr Wildlife Gardener just put his foot in a wasps' nest while pruning a conifer in the front garden. Commenting that he would have been better off standing on a hornets' nest didn't cheer him up as I squirted on the second can of Wasp-Eze....

The Ranger responds: heh! Wildlife, eh? You can always rely on invertebrates to get the last laugh somehow. Still, let Mr WG exorcise his ire on those pesky conifers!
PermalinkPermalink 08/07/07 @ 20:47

 

Comment from: David Slicer Email
I live in Ohio and have seen what matches the appearance of the asian giant hornet, I have been trying to get a picture to verify it with no luck, so I've been searching the web to try and match it. It is approx. 2 inches in length, with a about a 3 inch wing spread. The head, base of the antenna, and legs are a bright orangish red color. Its midsection is mostly black with a red stripe across it, and its back section looks like a yellow jacket with bright yellow and black stripes evenly spaced. I have read about he Asian and the European Giant Hornets and based on description found on the web this one matches the asian. At the same time I have read that the Asian prefer more tropical conditions which we don't have here in Ohio, but this one does not match any description I have found on the European variety. Are there European variety which would match that description.

The Ranger responds: I really don't know much at all about US species, but I do know that Vespa mandarinia does not occur in Ohio, so it's certainly not that. Perhaps you should try a local expert - I'm afraid that's not me!
PermalinkPermalink 06/08/07 @ 18:04

 

Comment from: Dale Greer Email
I live in North Atlanta,Ga.suburb. I have seen bald face hornets - but what I have is not that.
It seems to fit the description of the European Giant Hornet except the yellow is not as bright - more tannish on brown on head and abdomen- definitely marked in similar fashion to yellow jacket but yellow is not bright at all. What do you think? By the way this insect is not aggressive likes to sit on a paticular branch of fitzajuniper for hours at a time.

The Ranger says: I know next to nothing about north American insects, but I'd say there's no chance you have a European hornet. The clue's in the name, really. Best you find a US ranger to find out any more, as I'm not sure I'm going to be much more help than that!
PermalinkPermalink 19/08/07 @ 17:08

 

Comment from: Susan G.
I am in southern New Jersey and we are overwhelmed by the European hornet. They were intoduced into North America in the mid 1800's. From what I have read about them, they have spead as far south as Georgia.
PermalinkPermalink 05/10/07 @ 23:32

 

See; Hornets-The Gentle Giants home page. This will help. Not my website but quite informative. My daughter recently moved to TN and was deluged by nocturnal "hornets" around her lights at night. They came in her house under the door which wasn't sealed by any gaskets. I told her to check with the county extension agent just to find out what kind they were. We had had a mating pair land with a "plop" next to us when I was visiting this past summer. Since she never had time to check for herself, I managed to find this wonderful site. Go over the whole thing and you'll probably feel better and even differently about these insects!
Deborah
PermalinkPermalink 08/10/07 @ 01:27

 

Comment from: Ann Email
I live on the Isle of Wight and found a European Hornet in my room today. I had never seen such a big "wasp" and trying to look up the kind, I came across your blog. I still had to go ask the neighbour to catch it for me and he released it in the garden. I hope there isn't a nest nearby or is that impossible in autumn?

The Ranger responds: if you're on the Island and you really did find a hornet, then I'm guessing you're on the north-western coast, as hornets are not known to breed on the Island but individuals do occasionally make their way over from the New Forest. So no, there is not going to be a nest nearby. If there is, I'd very much like to see it as it will be a new record for the Island.
PermalinkPermalink 10/10/07 @ 20:21

 

Comment from: janine joan ayres Email
Like many people we have had European Hornets building nests in our Kent garden for the last 3 years. This year they have been madly circling in sunlit patches of the garden over the last week, 14/10-21/10 emerging as the frost disappears. Today we spotted a group of 3 lying on the ground, tightly entwined with others crawling over them, is this the last desperate throes of starvation?

The Ranger responds: yep, wasps and hornet workers do not overwinter but either starve to death or kill each other once the season comes to an end and the new queens have flown away. You can often see them crowded around ivy blooms at this time of year, but they'll all be dead within a few weeks.
PermalinkPermalink 21/10/07 @ 12:46

 

Comment from: H. bakhshi Email
I have a mature & healthy (40 feet) conifer tree at the back (end) of my garden.
Neighbour at the other side of the garden is insisting that I should reduce the height of the tree. I am worried that the tree may die and its beautiful conical shape will be deformed.

Plesr suggest the solution.

Regards,

The Ranger responds: if it's your tree, you don't have to do anything to it unless you want to do so except in some very limited legal situations. If you're worried contact your local council and ask to speak to the tree officer. They can advise you.
PermalinkPermalink 21/03/08 @ 23:50

 

Comment from: anysia Email
hiya i live in east sussex in england and for the past year in summer times we have had and out break of european wasps/hornets why are they coming over to england?
PermalinkPermalink 09/05/08 @ 13:55

 

Comment from: Patrick Email
I have also seen European hornets on a fairly regular basis. I live in Milton Keynes ( well just outside it) and these things are HUGE. I'm not a lover of things that fly and sting, however these seem very docile. They like to sit in the sun and there's one that likes to sit on the flyscreen i'd put up on my window. I'd estimate 3 to 4 centimetres long and probably 1 centimetre thick. It looks like they are attracted to the Holly bushes in the garden fine with me as that's 150metres from the house :)
PermalinkPermalink 15/06/08 @ 08:32

 

Comment from: E M Banfield Email
My husband was stung yesterday by a giant 'wasp'. I didn't know what it was\whenI saw it but have identified it as a queen hornet (i think) it was about one and a half inches long with slender wings and was not soft and cuddly! It appeared to have taken residence in our eaves over the back door and took exception to my husband entering the house. We have dogs who guard the house and the job was not vacant! The hornet has now gone to the great hornet graveyard in the sky and I'm down half a bottle of vinegar. My husband smells like a chip shop but we cab get in the house now without being attacked. Sorry if I've upset anyone but we are quite territorial here in Cornwall on Bodmin Moor!!!
PermalinkPermalink 17/06/08 @ 14:39

 

Comment from: Liz
I live in Maryland...and there's one BIG bug outside. My friend's mom suggested it might be a cicada killer, but it is NOT. The thing is as big as my thumb, and it's not got any brown marks. It's black and yellow, and it's terrifying, though of course I'm not willing to get close enough to it to really check and see what color it's head is...that this is scary! I just ran inside to get away from it. I'm tempted to keep a big bottle of bug spray with me now, only I think that might just make that thing outside angry.
PermalinkPermalink 17/06/08 @ 21:25

 

Comment from: albgardis Email
Hello, what a great site this is! I googled "huge hornet orange" and found it.

I live in Pennsylvania, extremely rural, far away from any roads or human civilization, and we are surrounded by all kinds of wild life. And yesterday evening I saw my first - uhm, ja what? It was extremely huge, orange and brown.

Like other people living in the US, I also looked at pictures online and thought "this is the asian hornet". But I believe you when you say it cannot be possible. Our climate is not able to have it living over here. So it must be that european version.

Here is what happened: I heard a big buzz inside the (closed) chimney, I thought a moth fell into it from the roof. We had the chimney-opening in the room only covered with a cut-out foam, since we are looking to get a stove to hook up there. So I am opening the foam cover to let the moth out, and I got really scared as a huge orange-brown monster hornet looks at me.

I ran upstairs in fear, thinking, I must get a plastic bag to get it out. Buy the time I came back down, it was gone. I felt like in a horror movie... But then it was at the double-glass door, trying to leave. It was about 5 o'clock in the afternoon, so bright daylight, and a warm day (around 20 degrees Celsius).

I was really scared, since I was not sure how aggresive that being was, and tried to convince it to leave through the open door. It did eventually, and I was really glad nobody got hurt.

I would never kill anyone, unless directly attacked, and this being did not at all threaten me. I was just scared by its huge size, but it really only wanted to leave.
So I am really appalled to read that Americans report here they killed the beings they saw.

This is so typical! They are even advertizing poisons here to pour on your lawn to kill everything alive ("who wants bugs?"), and then put their small children on their poisoned land...
(I am German, not American, I am only living here.)

Unfortunately I was not able to take a picture of that huge insect, but I clearly remember it was NOT YELLOW-BLACK but instead it was orange-brown, as thick and long as my middlefinger.

I am glad to learn it is harmless.

Any Americans reading this: please do not harm them!
PermalinkPermalink 24/06/08 @ 15:13

 

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The thoughts and writings of The Virtual Ranger, since 1995 the host and mascot of Naturenet, the UK's most popular independent environmental website; along with interjections from his real-life alter ego, Matthew Chatfield, and others. Featuring not only Naturenet and countryside related stuff, but, as on Naturenet, plenty of other material - more or less at random - that takes The Ranger's fancy. But you can be confident that soon enough he'll be rather sarcastic.

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