Guardian Weekly

Sting theory The truth about Asian hornets

Can a single insect reshape history? A queen hornet from the Vespa velutina species, which is believed to have stowed away in Chinese pottery, could make that claim. She was shipped to the port of Bordeaux in 2004. Having already mated with multiple males, she flew off into the sunshine of southwest France and built a nest. From that single nest, up to 500 new queens could have emerged.

For a few years, her offspring quietly prospered. By the time the authorities paid attention to this predatory yellow-legged carnivore, known as the Asian hornet, it was too late. Twenty years on, France is home to an estimated 500,000 nests, while the hornet has cruised into Spain, Portugal, Switzerland, Italy, Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands and the UK.

The horror stories about this “killer” – a “nasty” predator that decimates much-loved honeybees and

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