Disaster Murder hornets are back - COME MY MINIONS RISE FOR YOUR MASTER

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Seattle scientists recently discovered a dead Asian giant hornet, marking the first time this year we’ve seen the so-called “murder hornets.”

Are murder hornets back?​

Per USA Today, the scientists from Washington state and the U.S. Agriculture Department confirmed the first murder hornet in Snohomish County, which is north of Seattle.
  • However, the murder hornet appears to be different than the 2019 and 2020 swarm of hornets that came from Canada that created headlines of hysteria (including this one that I wrote). The hornets are not from the same batch.
The newly discovered hornet is the same type of hornet, though, according to USA Today. They originated in Asia and have spread to the U.S.-Canada border. They often threaten honeybees and other hornets.
  • “While not particularly aggressive toward humans, their sting is extremely painful and repeated stings, though rare, can kill,” according to USA Today.
Per The New York Times, the hornets “can use mandibles shaped like spiked shark fins to wipe out a honeybee hive in a matter of hours, decapitating the bees and flying away with the thoraxes to feed their young.”

Can murder hornets be stopped?​

Yes. Back in 2020 when the first batch of hornets came through, Twitter user Brandon Morse posted a video of a murder hornet being killed by bees. That’s right. The video shows the hornet attacking some bees before the bees swarm the hornet and kill it.

“While the hornets may be much bigger in size compared to the Japanese honeybees, the large number of bees in the hive allows them to gain the advantage and defeat the hornet,” according to Newsweek.

Will more murder hornets return?​

Apparently so. Scientists predicted in September 2020 that the Asian murder hornets could come back to the U.S. to establish a new habitat.
  • In fact, the scientists said that “if the world’s largest hornet gains a foothold in Washington state, it could spread down much of the West Coast of the United States.”
 
Why not import that one bird from Japan that kills the Suzemibachi lol. Or probably some predator in North America will figure it out.

I recently found out that a scary looking thing known as a Maud Dauber kills black widows. And that one weird looking wasp.

Edit: Apparently the bird is the Oriental Honey Buzzard.
Because when humans forcefully introduce non-native species it tends to go poorly. Crane toads and rabbits in Australia being the obvious ones I know of.
 
They aren't "back".
You don't call something "back" if it never left, or at least rebounded.
At least do "here now" or "still spreading" if its a new locality record.
Why not import that one bird from Japan that kills the Suzemibachi lol. Or probably some predator in North America will figure it out.
Releasing another soon-to-be invasive species to control the existing invasive species is rarely ever a good idea.
I recently found out that a scary looking thing known as a Maud Dauber kills black widows. And that one weird looking wasp.
The Mud Daubers kidnap the spiders (usually wolf spiders and fishing spiders due to their microhabitat preferences, admittedly) and paralyze - but don't kill them. The Mud Dauber then lays its eggs with the spider trapped in a tiny mud case and the dauber larvae then eat the paralyzed spider alive.

What's ironic though, is there are several species of Ichneumon Wasps which find the Mud Dauber larvae eating their doomed spider meal, and then drill a hole into the mud case and lay their own parasitic young into the Mud Dauber larvae who then eat the Mud Dauber larvae alive.

Nature is metal.
 
The most surprising thing to me is the complete lack of a monstergirl version of these things so far. I guess not even mangaka want to think about their dicks near these things.
There are two well known manga that reference this insect.

Terraformers references it in a badass way with the one of the protagonists apparently injected with the gene for it that rekts the cockroaches.

And then there is Bleach where one of the female characters in the anime has it it turn into a female version of her weapon.
 
The most surprising thing to me is the complete lack of a monstergirl version of these things so far. I guess not even mangaka want to think about their dicks near these things.
Wrong nigga.
Hornet Girls are in the hallowed Monster Girl Encyclopedia, the ultimate source for monster women.
1624076964530.jpg

Checkmate, atheists.
 
Instead we're probably just going to be getting rape hornets next year...
Large bug type monsters, even among the bee family. Just like other bee family monsters, they make nests and live in groups centered around a queen.

Even for members of the bee family, their disposition is extremely ferocious and they fly around in search of prey and human men throughout the day. When they spot prey, they stop its movements with their spears, which are painted with paralyzing poison and then take them back to their nest.

Additionally, the stinger on their abdomen can be used to inject a lewd venom that incites sexual arousal in human men. Perhaps because they've always got this lewd venom stored in their abdomen, they're often unbearably horny and they're dying to rape a human man. For that reason, when they spot a human man, they gleefully fly at him and after stopping his movement with paralyzing poison, they inject him with the lewd venom from the stinger on their abdomen, capturing the man with these two venoms. Then with a man in sight, in order to sooth their even more violently throbbing body, they rape the man thoroughly until satisfied.
I'm sorry, you wanted non-rape hornets? The Monster Girl Encyclopedia is not what you're looking for. There isn't a single entry in there that isn't somewhat rapey.
 
Per USA Today, the scientists from Washington state and the U.S. Agriculture Department confirmed the first murder hornet in Snohomish County, which is north of Seattle.

Apparently so. Scientists predicted in September 2020 that the Asian murder hornets could come back to the U.S. to establish a new habitat.


What scientists?

I?m not saying they are wrong, but "scientists" it's such a vague term. Someone with a Physics degree is a scientist.

Entomologists, that's the word you're looking for. Or just say "insect experts" if you don't have google available.
 
OH NO! NOT THE HECKING ARTICULINOS!!!! I HAVE MY RIGHTS!!!
> why is the right obsessed with eating bugs
> shown multiple articles talking about eating bugs
> why is the right so worked up about eating bugs

Typical goalpost-shifting from the left.
 
Don't worry lads, THE SCIENCE has renamed the hornets to stop Anti-Asian Hate.


Screenshot 2022-07-28 073819.png

The World’s Largest Hornet Is Getting a New Name (Archive)

It’s big. It’s bad. It will take off your head, eat your family and destroy your home. If you are a honeybee, that is.

Since it was found in the Pacific Northwest in 2019, the world’s largest hornet, Vespa mandarinia, has concerned environmentalists and beekeepers alike. The insect, native to parts of Asia, is usually around an inch and a half long with a wide, mustard-colored head and a striped body. It has an appetite for bees and other insects and can decimate hives in hours. Its presence in North America has sparked a desperate effort to eradicate the small population before it is permanently established.

Mandarinia’s superlative size, painful sting and violent tendencies have made it a popular topic in the media, where it has been referred to as the “Asian giant hornet” and the “murder hornet.” On Monday, though, the Entomological Society of America, or E.S.A., introduced a new common name for the insect: the Northern giant hornet.

Chris Looney, an entomologist at the Washington State Department of Agriculture who has been leading efforts to control the spread of the hornets, wrote the official proposal to change the insect’s name. He cited various reasons for doing so, including the rise of anti-Asian hate crimes during the COVID-19 pandemic. Connecting a scary insect, already associated with murder and attempted eradication, to Asia, might stoke more anti-Asian sentiment.

“In my personal experience I have heard statements like ‘another damn thing from China’ multiple times (irrespective of the fact that the hornets detected in North America likely originated in Japan or Korea),” Dr. Looney wrote.

“Calling it the Asian giant hornet wasn’t very descriptive because a number of related giant hornets come from Asia,” said Jessica Ware, an entomologist and president of the Entomological Society of America. “And then murder hornet wasn’t very descriptive, either, because they don’t murder people.”

Although its sting can induce swelling, excruciating pain and sometimes deadly allergic reactions, the northern giant hornet is not aggressive toward humans — and it’s unlikely that any could have “malice aforethought” in related fatalities. Even in targeting other insects, Dr. Ware raised doubts as to whether the hornet’s behavior could be described as murder. “I don’t know that insects are capable of murder,” she said. “We don’t say that lions are murderers when they hunt.”

The adoption of this new name is part of the Entomological Society’s Better Common Names Project, which was launched in 2021 to facilitate communication between scientists and the public. The project’s task force was also responsible for renaming the Lymantria dispar, the spongy moth. Previously, the insect’s common name contained a term that is derogatory to Romani people.

“I think it’s very important to avoid names that are associated with particular races or regions,” said Akito Kawahara, an entomologist at the Florida Museum of Natural History who supported the hornet’s name change. “Especially when they’re invading organisms — that’s really, really problematic.”

Dr. Kawahara grew up moving between the United States and Japan, where the northern giant hornet is native. In Japanese, the insect’s name translates to “sparrow hornet,” and, despite the fact that some people fry the hornets up to eat and put them in sake, Dr. Kawahara said that “it’s just treated like a regular insect.” In the United States, on the other hand, he continued, “all this media surrounds this organism because of what it does and because of the name. It’s a craze.”

Although common names of species are often linked to native regions or countries, they can quickly become outdated by discovery of expanded natural ranges and changing political boundaries. (Take, for instance, the Burmese python.) Still, names can be sticky, especially when they are given to particularly mesmerizing animals. “You would be surprised by some of the names that are out there,” Dr. Ware said.

When it comes to regional and nationalistic nomenclature, Dr. Kawahara said that these kinds of names “definitely, definitely” lead to a more emotionally valanced perception of species. As a child in Japan, he noticed that invasive organisms linked to America were often vilified. “And it’s all because of the name,” he said.
 
So it doesnt actually come from "the north," but we'll call it "northern giant hornet" because that's where it showed up after leaving its place of origin?

Ah, but "Muh Asian hate!" What race is more generally associated with "northern," perchance?
 
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