Karla Salp
Communications
Gov. Inslee dons a hornet hunter hat while touring the hornet detection area in 2022. Gov. Inslee and the Washington Legislature have been very supportive of the hornet eradication efforts. |
Since the first confirmed detection of the northern giant
hornet (Vespa mandarina, also known as the Asian giant hornet) in 2019,
there has been overwhelming interest from the public to help eradicate this
invasive pest.
WSDA has welcomed this community support, leading to a
hybrid government-public response that has been revolutionary – and effective.
More than half of the confirmed hornet detections in the state have come from
public reports. Three of the four nests eradicated in the state were found as the
direct result of public reports.
The community has played a game-changing role in WSDA’s
efforts to eradicate the hornets from our state. Although we had no detections
last year, we’re not out of the woods yet.
We still need you.
Hornet sighting reported to WSDA via social media in 2020. |
- Trapping. WSDA has established a Public Hornet Trapping project, which provides community members with information on how to build and check hornet traps and report any hornets that are caught. The traps are placed in July and are left up through November.
- Watch a Wasp Nest. The public and WSDA staff have witnessed northern giant hornets repeatedly attacking paper wasp nests. These nests can easily be found under the eaves of many buildings. By joining the “Watch a Wasp Nest” program, you commit to spending five minutes a week observing paper wasp nests on your property and logging activity, including whether you notice hornets at the nest.
- Report sightings. Helping detect northern giant hornets can be as simple as being aware of your surroundings. If you think you spot one, get a photo if you safely can. Report suspected sightings with as much detail as possible, including where the insect was spotted, what it was doing, and if it flew off, the direction in which it headed.
EVERY hornet report matters. Whether found while trapping,
watching paper wasp nests, or just being observant when you are out and about,
it is critical to report each and every suspect hornet sighting. We get
hundreds – if not thousands – of false reports each year, but we gladly accept
them because it means you are on the lookout and that means we receive the few
but critical confirmed detections we need to eradicate the hornets for good.