logo
Thirteen states are invaded by terrifying killer bees that swarm by the hundreds and chase cars for miles

Thirteen states are invaded by terrifying killer bees that swarm by the hundreds and chase cars for miles

Daily Mail​6 hours ago

Terrifying killer bees are spreading northward in the US, researchers fear.
The Africanized honey bee, normally found in southern Africa, is far more aggressive than the European honey bee, the most common in the US.
Nicknamed the killer bee, the insects attack in 'clouds' and can sting victims thousands of times.
They attack when their hive is disturbed, or in response to loud noises, such as a tree-trimmer or lawn-mower — even when it is a few blocks away.
Once on the loose, the bees can chase their target for up to a mile and experts say victims have little option other than to run.
In the past three months, the bees have killed one man and three horses in Texas and hospitalized at least six people — including three tree-trimmers in Texas and three hikers in Arizona who had to run a mile from the 'biggest cloud of bees I have ever seen'.
Arriving in the US in the 1990s after escaping from farms in Brazil, the bees are already present in 13 states — including Florida, Utah and California.
But experts now fear that warmer temperatures will allow the deadly insects to advance further north up the east and west coasts — putting tens of millions more Americans at risk.
Dr Juliana Rangel, a bee expert in Texas who has been chased by the bees herself, warned: 'By 2050 or so, with increasing temperatures, we're going to see northward movement, mostly in the western half of the country.'
And more of the US is at risk.
A previous study found that the bees could easily advance into southeastern Oregon and the western Great Plains — attracted by the more arid climate similar to their native range.
And researchers also fear that the bees could advance into the Southern Appalachian Mountains within the next few years.
The bee is visually similar to the European honey bee, a docile and familiar bee in the US, but is much more aggressive.
Bee stings contain the toxin melittin, which can cause cells to burst and trigger massive inflammation in large quantities, potentially leading to organ failure and death.
While Africanized bees' venom is no more potent than the European honey bee — and the bee still dies after stinging — the aggressive species is far more likely to sting and much more likely to attack in large numbers.
Swarms of the Africanized honey bees can sting someone thousands of times.
In 2022, a 20-year-old man was reportedly stung 20,000 times and ingested 30 bees after he was attacked by a swarm while cutting tree branches near a nest. He was hospitalized but survived.
The Africanized honey bee reached the US after spreading up from Brazil, where it was introduced in the 1950s in an attempt to boost honey production.
It is now present in 13 US states: California, Nevada, Utah, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia and Florida.
But colonies keep being detected further north, including in several more northerly Alabama counties last year and in previously in states like South Carolina and the Bay Area in California.
The insects generally prefer arid or semi-arid conditions similar to their native areas, but avoid areas that have cold winters or high levels of rain.
Comparing the two types of bees, Dr Jamie Ellis, an entomologist in Florida who studies the insects, told the Daytona Beach News-Journal: 'If I'm working around one of my European honey bee colonies and I knock on it with a hammer, it might send out five to 10 individuals to see what's going on.
'They would follow me perhaps as far as my house and I might get stung once.
'If I did the same thing with an Africanized colony, I might get 50 to 100 individuals who would follow me much farther and I'd get more stings. It's really an issue of scale.'
Dr Rangel added that the bees are much more sensitive to sound, saying: 'You could be mowing a lawn a few houses away and just the vibrations will set them off.
'In Texas, every year there's at least four big [Africanized bee] attacks that make the news.'
She added: 'They can pursue you in your vehicle for a mile. The only thing preventing them from killing you is the [bee suit]. It's like a cloud of bees that all wants to sting you. It's scary.'
Officials in Tennessee warn people to avoid all wild colonies of bees and to report any that they find to their county for monitoring.
If someone is attacked by the bees, officials in most states advise people to 'run away quickly'.
The above map, published in 2020, shows the range of the bees and areas that have a suitable habitat for the species
While running, they say people should pull their shirt up over their head to protect the face, but make sure this doesn't slow their progress.
Someone should only stop running when they reach closed shelter like a building or vehicle. It is likely that some bees will enter with them, experts say, but most will be locked outside.
People are advised not to swat the bees or flail their arms, because this could antagonize them and lead to a worse attack.
The Africanized honey bee is a hybrid made by mixing the European honey bee with the East African lowland honey bee.
The aim was to create a bee that produced more honey, but 26 swarms escaped quarantine in 1957 and have since spread through South America and into the US.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

I'm always tired, so I tried a celebrity-loved injectable that promises to boost your energy and make you more productive - but does it work?
I'm always tired, so I tried a celebrity-loved injectable that promises to boost your energy and make you more productive - but does it work?

Daily Mail​

time17 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

I'm always tired, so I tried a celebrity-loved injectable that promises to boost your energy and make you more productive - but does it work?

I know there are few things more boring than hearing about how tired and busy other people are, but let's just say that, as a full-time working mother with two kids under five, I am more tired and busy than I've ever been before. So when I had the opportunity to test out NAD+, a molecule that's had the wellness world buzzing with its promise to increase energy, super-charge focus, enhance your mood and improve your sleep, I was definitely interested. After having my second child I've been left with a brain fog that rarely lifts outside of work, and I've always been a terrible sleeper. Who wouldn't want to be a more productive, get-up-and-go version of themselves?

Tens of thousands of women forced to travel out of state for abortion care after Roe v Wade was overturned in 2022
Tens of thousands of women forced to travel out of state for abortion care after Roe v Wade was overturned in 2022

The Independent

time2 hours ago

  • The Independent

Tens of thousands of women forced to travel out of state for abortion care after Roe v Wade was overturned in 2022

Tens of thousands abortion patients have been forced to leave their home states to seek abortion care three years after the end of constitutionally protected abortion access in America. One out of every seven abortion patients, or roughly 155,000 people, left their home state for abortion care last year, according to the Guttmacher Institute, a reproductive health research group. That total is slightly fewer than the 170,000 people who traveled for abortion care in 2023, but it remains a remarkable spike in abortion-related travel compared to the years before the Supreme Court's June 2022 decision in Dobbs v Jackson Women's Health Organization, which overturned Roe v Wade and allowed states to criminalize abortion care and implement outright bans. Out-of-state travel for abortion care has virtually doubled since that ruling. Since the Dobbs decision, 13 states have outlawed abortions in virtually all circumstances, creating a patchwork of abortion access across the country, and balkanized legal constraints for patients and providers, who are shielded in some states and criminalized in others. The total number of abortions each year has also steadily increased in the wake of that decision. In 2024, 1.14 million abortions occurred in the United States, according to the Society for Family Planning. Roughly one in four abortions were performed through telehealth last year, with an average of 12,330 abortions per month performed through medication abortion, which typically requires a two-drug protocol that a patient can take at home. That's up from one in five in 2023 and one in every 20 in 2022. Medication abortion has accounted for the vast majority of abortions in recent years. Roughly 63 percent of all abortions are now medication abortions, according to Guttmacher. Mifepristone, one of two prescription drugs used in medication abortions, is approved for use by the FDA up to 10 weeks of pregnancy. From 2019 through 2020, nearly 93 percent of all abortions were performed before the 13th week, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. But the drug is at the center of legal challenges fueled by right-wing anti-abortion activist groups who have sought to strip the government's approval and implement sweeping federal bans on abortion care. President Donald Trump's administration has also pledged to revisit the drug's approval, using spurious reporting and junk science, in an apparent attempt to undermine the basis for the government's approval. Nearly half of patients who traveled for an abortion last year came from states where abortion is outlawed — including more than 28,000 Texas residents, more than any other state, Guttmacher found. 'While these findings show us where and how far patients are traveling, they are not able to capture the numerous financial, logistical, social and emotional obstacles people face,' according to Guttmacher Institute data scientist and study lead Isaac Maddow-Zimet. In the months after the Dobbs decision, sweeping anti-abortion restrictions across the deep South and neighboring states have effectively forced abortion patients to travel hundreds of miles to reach the nearest state where abortion access was legal. Florida, surrounded by anti-abortion states, was initially a key point of abortion access in the South within the first two years after the Dobbs decision. In 2023, more than 9,000 people traveled from other states to get an abortion there, according to Guttmacher. Roughly one in every two abortions nationwide and one in three abortions in the South were performed in Florida at that time. Last year, Florida banned abortion beyond six weeks of pregnancy, before many women know they are even pregnant, and the number of patients traveling to the state for abortion care was virtually cut in half. Another 8,000 people left the state to get an abortion elsewhere, often crossing as many as three states to get there, Guttmacher found. 'It was not just Floridians who were impacted, but also the thousands of out-of-state patients who would have traveled there for care,' according to Candace Gibson, Guttmacher Institute Director of State Policy. 'The most extreme abortion bans are concentrated in the South, which makes it disproportionately difficult for people living in that region to exercise their fundamental right to bodily autonomy,' she added.

CDC vaccine report cites study that does not exist, says scientist listed as author
CDC vaccine report cites study that does not exist, says scientist listed as author

The Guardian

time2 hours ago

  • The Guardian

CDC vaccine report cites study that does not exist, says scientist listed as author

A review on the use of the preservative thimerosal in vaccines slated to be presented on Thursday to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) outside vaccine committee cites a study that does not exist, the scientist listed as the study's author said. The report, called Thimerosal as a Vaccine Preservative published on the CDC website on Tuesday, is to be presented by Lyn Redwood, a former leader of the anti-vaccine group Children's Health Defense. It makes reference to a study called Low-level neonatal thimerosal exposure: Long-term consequences in the brain, published in the journal Neurotoxicology in 2008, and co-authored by UC Davis professor emeritus Robert Berman. But according to Berman, 'it's not making reference to a study I published or carried out.' Berman said he co-authored a similarly named study in a different journal – Toxicological Sciences – that came to different conclusions than those suggested by Redwood. 'We did not examine the effects of thimerosal in microglia … I do not endorse this misrepresentation of the research,' he said. Reuters is the first to report on the inaccurate citation from Redwood's planned presentation. The meeting has become increasingly controversial after the US health secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr, just weeks ago abruptly fired all previous 17 members of the expert panel and named eight new members, half of whom have advocated against vaccines. Kennedy, a long-time anti-vaccine activist, founded the Children's Health Defense. Both Republican senator Bill Cassidy of Louisiana and Democratic senator Patty Murray of Washington state said the meeting on 25 and 26 June should be postponed. The summary of the presentation suggested that there are enough thimerosal-free flu vaccines and that all pregnant women, infants and children should receive only those shots. It was not clear if the new advisory panel would be asked to vote on such a move. Redwood's presentation was in contrast to a separate report posted by CDC staff on the CDC website on Tuesday that says evidence does not support a link between thimerosal-containing vaccines and autism or other neurodevelopmental disorders. Kennedy has long pushed a link between vaccines and autism contrary to scientific evidence. Redwood could not be immediately reached for comment. An HHS spokesperson said the study being referenced was the Toxicological Sciences study Berman said was being misrepresented. The CDC's briefing material reviewed some studies on neurodevelopmental outcomes and vaccines that contain thimerosal, which has long been used in the US in multi-dose vials of medicines and vaccines to prevent germs from growing in them. According to the CDC report, 96% of all influenza vaccines in the US were thimerosal free during the 2024-25 flu season. It also added that the number of pregnant women receiving a thimerosal-containing flu vaccine has decreased over time, with only 0.3% of doses given in 2024 containing thimerosal. Kennedy wrote a book in 2014 claiming that thimerosal, a mercury-based preservative, causes brain damage. On Monday, Cassidy, who heads the US Senate committee on health, education, labor and pensions, called for the meeting to be delayed, saying it should not take place with a relatively small panel and without a CDC director in place. Murray, a senior member and former chair of the Help Committee, has also called for the fired panel members to be reinstated or the meeting be delayed until new members are appropriately vetted.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store