The Asian hornet has now been observed in Denmark. There are concerns that European honeybees are increasingly threatened, including in the Nordic region.
The Asian hornet, scientifically known as Vespa velutina nigrithorax, belongs to the hornet family and occurs naturally in Asia. It is suspected to have first arrived in Europe with a shipment of pottery from China to France in 2004, and has since rapidly spread to Spain, Switzerland and Germany.
Observed in Denmark
The species has now been observed on the island of Funen in Denmark, and the spread is considered a serious threat to the beekeeping industry, says Astrid Bjerke Lund, communications manager at Norges Birøkterlag (Norway’s Beekeepers’ Association) to the Norwegian state broadcaster NRK.
– This worries us. It’s a threat to our honeybees and therefore also to fruit and vegetable production, says Bjerke Lund.
The East Asian honeybee has the habit of forming a ball around invading Vespa velutina individuals and heating them to death, but the European honeybee has not learned this defense method. In Europe, the Asian hornet is perceived as so frightening that European bees don’t dare to fly in the same way as usual.
– If the honeybee cannot get out to collect nectar and pollen, they will not survive. That’s why it’s very serious if the Asian hornet comes to Norway, continues Bjerke Lund.
Swedish Board of Agriculture also warns
The Swedish Board of Agriculture (Jordbruksverket) does not rule out that it could become a threat to southern Sweden as well, both to honeybees through predation, and to the European hornet through food competition.
The Asian hornet is somewhat smaller than the European hornet and is dark on the abdomen, except for a yellow band at the rear, while the European hornet has red markings on the abdomen. Additionally, it is known for having yellow legs.