logo
Asian hornet horror as record numbers invade Britain with worst areas mapped

Asian hornet horror as record numbers invade Britain with worst areas mapped

Daily Mirror21 hours ago

More Asian hornets have been spotted than ever before in Britain, with beekeepers calling on the public to help detect the 'highly aggressive predator' this summer
Britain is braced for a record year of invasive Asian hornets, with more sightings of the yellow-legged killer pest so far this year than ever before.
The species are believed to have arrived in France on a shipment from China in 2004, and ever since have posed a serious threat to the UK's native insects, including honey bees. As well as their differing appearance from wasps and other hornets with their yellow legs, they are more likely to aggressively sting unprovoked.
As of June, 30 sightings of bee-killing Asian hornets have been confirmed by lab tests. However, according to the National Bee Unit, 39 "credible" sightings have been reported so far this year, with more awaiting confirmation.
At this point in 2024, there had been 20 sightings of Asian hornets, while at this stage of 2023, there had been just four. Of the most recent confirmed sightings, the vast majority have been in Kent, but hornets have also been captured in Sussex and Hampshire.
However, one of the sightings still awaiting lab confirmation was made as far north as Mordon in County Durham. The National Bee Unit says nine Asian hornet nests have been destroyed already this year.
Last year, 24 nests were found and destroyed. In 2023, a record 72 hornet nests were destroyed.
The British Beekeepers Association (BBKA) is calling for help from the public to help detect this "highly aggressive predator which causes a significant risk to honey bees and other pollinators in the UK".
Beekeepers are worried because a single hornet can kill between 60 to 90 honeybees in a day, and groups of them will "hawk" a hive at any one time by decimating the bees. Yellow-legged Asian hornets are easily identifiable due to their very dark body and wide orange stripes on the fourth abdominal segment.
Originally from Asia, they were first recorded in Europe in France in 2004 when it is believed a hornet arrived in a shipment of pottery from China. In 2016, the hornets were found in the UK for the first time in Tetbury, Gloucestershire. The BBKA is now urging everyone to report any sightings using the Asian Hornet Watch app.
A spokesperson for the BBKA said: "It is important not to approach or disturb a nest, as although they are not generally aggressive towards people, they can be if they perceive a threat."
Asian hornets are slightly smaller than European hornets and can be identified by their distinct markings. They have yellow legs, an orange face, and a dark black/ brown body with one yellow or orange stripe on the lower abdomen.
Sightings can be reported via the Asian Hornet Watch app - which is available to download for Android and Apple device - online at irecord.org.uk/enter-non-native-records or by emailing alertnonnative@ceh.ac.uk.
For guidance on how to report and spot Asian hornets, you can head online here.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Easy Money: The Charles Ponzi review — Apple is scraping the barrel
Easy Money: The Charles Ponzi review — Apple is scraping the barrel

Times

time15 hours ago

  • Times

Easy Money: The Charles Ponzi review — Apple is scraping the barrel

There is a dogged, unimaginative but undeniable logic to Easy Money from Apple. The public appetite for podcasts about scammers is drearily insatiable and studios have spent years drearily obliging it. I've reviewed shows about romance scammers, sex scammers, financial scammers, fake heiresses, fake invalids, fake entrepreneurs … but now the well of scammers is running dry (several of the juiciest scams have been covered by multiple podcasters). Studios are casting about for barrels to scrape. One answer is … go back and review one of the original canonical scams, such as Charles Ponzi's scheme. In some hands this would have been a good idea (I would have loved to have heard the episode of The Rest Is History). But this is Apple. You can almost hear how the meeting went. The bored executive — perhaps wondering whether there isn't more to life than sitting in a room green-lighting scammer podcasts — waving them away, saying: 'Yeah, yeah, whatever. Scam … Ponzi … dramatic reconstructions. Sounds like it should be a podcast. Go and make it.' I know I'm a voice crying in the wilderness on this one, but just because it's got a famous name in the title and the word scam attached to it doesn't mean it should necessarily be a podcast. • Why a fear of being conned might be worse for you than the con itself The journalist Maya Lau narrates the story with an incongruous valley girl drawl. 'All the original characters of this original 1920s story are, sadly, dead,' she drawls impassively, sounding really not very sad at all. Due to the unfortunate deadness of the protagonist, the comedian Sebastian Maniscalco is drafted in to play Ponzi. One of the main problems facing Easy Money is that it seems to be pitching for a youthful audience, but the basis of Ponzi's scam — bulk-buying international postage coupons and trying to sell them on at different exchange rates — doesn't quite have the edgy relevance of, say, an internet sex cult. Sebastian Maniscalco is brought in to do an impression of Ponzi MICHAEL LOCCISANO/GETTY IMAGES FOR TRIBECA FESTIVAL The disparity between the hip, cool and with-it scam show that Easy Money half wants to be and the somewhat creaky antique material it has to work with becomes positively comical in episode two. 'We don't refund stamp coupons,' a postal employee insists to the accompaniment of intensely throbbing electronic music, '… we don't refund coupons.' 'A coupon must be accepted by any country belonging to the universal postage union in exchange for a stamp! So why not a refund?' Maniscalco cries melodramatically, making an admirable but doomed attempt to invest this unpromisingly leaden expositional dialogue with jeopardy. • Read more radio and podcast reviews An air of unignorable jadedness hangs over proceedings. Lau's drawl is probably supposed to sound cool, but just ends up communicating (understandable) boredom with the subject of post office coupons. Maniscalco does his best to gee things along, but ultimately gives the impression of an actor hamming away at an ill-attended matinee at an airless provincial theatre. Can you blame him? The script he's working with has an air of AI-generated banality. Maya Lau attempts to make the original Ponzi Scheme sound cool but it's closer to boredom MICHAEL LOCCISANO/GETTY IMAGES FOR TRIBECA FESTIVAL 'I'm 37,' Ponzi tells his wife at one point. 'Yes that's not new information,' she replies. 'Soon I'll be 40,' he says. I'm on the edge of my seat. Lau is given similarly pointless material to work with. 'The headlines of the nation's biggest newspapers charted his swift rise and even swifter fall.' Only its biggest newspapers? Come back, romance scammers. All is forgiven. ★★☆☆☆ Follow @timesculture to read the latest reviews

Woman sues for £250,000 after being pushed into pool at boozy work party
Woman sues for £250,000 after being pushed into pool at boozy work party

Metro

time19 hours ago

  • Metro

Woman sues for £250,000 after being pushed into pool at boozy work party

A woman injured after being pushed into a pool at a work party says her former bosses didn't do enough to keep her safe. Chloe Hewitt was an events manager for health drink brand Herbalife, who put on the party as part of a training and team-building event at a luxury hotel in Mauritius in 2022. Chloe, now aged 26, was thrown into the swimming pool as a joke by other intoxicated attendees who had been making the most of the free bar. But she landed on broken drinking glasses which had been dropped in the pool, cutting her foot which caused nerve damage requiring two operations and physiotherapy to treat. Chloe, from Weybridge in Surrey, is suing the European arm of Herbalife and claiming £250,000 of damages. Herbalife denies liability, saying the incident happened after the company's party had ended and Chloe was off the clock. Chloe's barrister Matthew Chapman KC told the High Court: 'At around midnight on June 4, 2022, the DJ continued to play music and the free bar continued to serve drinks. 'The dance floor was located next to the resort swimming pool. Drinks were provided in glasses and there was broken glass on and around the dance floor. 'Some of the partygoers were exhibiting obvious signs of intoxication. There were no security staff on duty. 'After midnight, the claimant observed a French employee of the defendant being picked up and carried by male partygoers who appeared to be drunk. Despite his protestations, the partygoers threw him into the resort swimming pool. 'Other members of the defendant's employed staff were then pushed or thrown into the swimming pool. 'Suddenly, the claimant was pushed from behind into the swimming pool. 'As she exited the swimming pool, she asked not to be pushed again. She could hear people remonstrating with the partygoers and asking them to calm down. 'The claimant was then pushed forcefully and unexpectedly from behind and back into the swimming pool. The claimant was completely submerged under the water and the force of her entry carried her to the base of the swimming pool where she caught her foot on an object lying there and felt an immediate, sharp pain. 'The claimant had caught her foot on broken glass debris which was on the bottom of the swimming pool, having found its way there from glasses containing drinks served at the farewell party.' Chloe's lawyers say Herbalife is responsible for her injury because it allowed its partygoing distributors to carry glasses onto the dancefloor and close to the swimming pool, and also having allowed free drinks to be served to 'clearly intoxicated' partygoers. But Herbalife denies responsibility for anything its distributors did, pointing out that 'Herbalife members' are people who run independent businesses selling its products. The free bar had only lasted an hour, says barrister Rory Holmes, while the entire Herbalife event was finished at midnight. More Trending He said: 'At midnight, there was an announcement on stage for the purpose of the distributors that the event had finished and the Paradis bar was staying open where drinks could be purchased from the hotel at the expense of the distributors.' He also claimed Chloe may not have cut her foot on a broken glass at all, suggesting she said at the time that she may have cut herself on a rounded light which had fallen into the pool. Chloe's claim was recently filed at the High Court, but the case has not yet gone before a judge. It will now go forward to a full trial, unless settled outside of court. Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@ For more stories like this, check our news page. MORE: Teenager jailed for crash that killed his girlfriend on country road MORE: Daughter of murdered pensioner saw burglar brutally kill her on Ring camera MORE: 'Drug dealer' killed mum-of-one after knocking her off e-bike with Land Rover

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