Posted on 08/24/2006 6:52:04 AM PDT by Sopater
MOBILE -- To the bafflement of insect experts, gigantic yellow jacket nests have started turning up in old barns, unoccupied houses, cars and underground cavities across the southern two-thirds of Alabama.
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A yellow jacket nest engulfs the inside of a 1955 Chevrolet on Harry Coker's Tallassee property on Thursday. Gigantic yellow jacket nests have been found in old barns, unoccupied houses, cars and underground cavities across the southern two-thirds of Alabama. |
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-- Rob Carr
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Auburn University entomologists, who say they've never seen the nests so large, have been fielding calls about the huge nests from property owners from Dothan up to Sylacauga and over into west-central Alabama's Black Belt.
At one site in Barbour County, the nest was as large as a Volkswagen Beetle, said Andy McLean, an Orkin pesticide service manager in Dothan who helped remove it from an abandoned barn about a month ago.
"It was one of the largest ones we've seen," McLean said.
Attached to two walls and under the slab, the nest had to be removed in sections, McLean said.
Entomologist Dr. Charles Ray at the Alabama Cooperative Extension System in Auburn said he's aware of about 16 of what he described as "super-sized" nests in south Alabama.
Ray said he's seen 10 of them and cautioned people about going near them because of the yellow jacket's painful sting.
The largest nest Ray has inspected this year filled the interior of a weathered 1955 Chevrolet parked in a rural Elmore County barn. That nest was about the size of a tire in the rear floor seven weeks ago, but quickly spread to fill the entire vehicle, the property owner, Harry Coker, said. Four satellite nests around it have gotten into the eaves of the barn, about 300 yards from his home.
"I'm kind of afraid for the grandkids. I had to sneak down there at dark and get my tractor out of the barn," Coker said. "It's been a disruption."
Coker said he may wait until a winter freeze to try to remove the nest.
In previous years, a yellow jacket nest was no larger than a basketball, Ray said. It would contain about 3,000 workers and one queen. These gigantic nests may have as many as 100,000 workers and multiple queens.
Without a cold winter to kill them this year, the yellow jackets continued feeding in January and February -- and layering their nests made of paper, not wax. They typically are built in shallow underground cavities.
Yellow jackets, often confused with bees, may visit flowers for sugar, but unlike bees, yellow jackets are carnivorous, eating insects, carrion and picnic food, according to scientists. "They were able to find food to colony through the winter," Ray said in a telephone interview.
He investigated a nest near Pineapple, measuring about 5 feet by 4 feet, that was coming out of the ground on a roadside. A southwest Pike County house in Goshen had a giant nest spreading into its roof.
Goshen Mayor G. Malon Johnson said he consulted Ray in removing it because he was concerned that children playing nearby could be attacked.
A colony has a maximum size in early July and August. The hot, dry conditions could force the yellow jackets out of ground nests.
"Normally it starts declining in the fall," Ray said.
He said the "super colonies" appear to have many queens.
"We're not really sure how this multiple queen thing works," Ray said. "It could be that the daughters of the original queen don't leave the nest or that the queens have developed some way to cooperate."
Ray examined a collected nest from Macon County to count the queens in it.
"We found 12 queens so far, so that's definitely a factor," Ray said Thursday.
Dr. Michael D. Goodisman, a biologist at Georgia Tech who has studied large nests in Australia, said he's heard of some large ones in Georgia and Florida, but not as big as those in Alabama.A 6-foot by 3-foot nest on a pond stump in Bulloch County, Ga., was featured July 12 on CNN.
"I'm not sure people know what triggers it," he said.
U.S. Department of Agriculture entomologist James H. Cane said he's familiar with a nest in Florida 10 or 15 years ago that engulfed a big easy chair. Cane said the monster nests reported in Alabama are intriguing and agreed with Ray that they could be the product of multiple queens in a single nest.
The nest usually dies out each year. "All that overwinters is the future queen," he said.
Given a queen's egg-laying rate, he said, there's no way a nest with a single queen could get that big in a growing season.
But in a multiple-queen colony, Cane said, there must be space where queens can't get at each other.
LOL! Don'cha love the way the artist gave the ant's eyes pupils? That movie is a hoot.
Don't block the entrance if they are living in the holes/cracks in the mortar between your bricks. They will find a way out even if they have to eat holes in your drywall. :(
Have these people never watched Sci-Fi movies? It's obviously been triggered by atomic radiation!
ping
All the better for them to ogle large breasted scantily clad female humans!
I was talking about underground nests, but your warning has been noted and underlined. Thanks!
What kind of bug guy says YJ's "sting" - they bite.
If they can't smell strangers, send in a Frenchman with a can of RAID. If it turns out they can smell Frenchmen, it's still a win - win.
Otherwise, what? A catfight?
Is that a Reuters photo?
Yikes!!!!
Yes! Both stings are horrid, but the red wasp sting is deadly to some!
I wonder if the increase in Yellow Jacket activity has to do with the reduction in the Honeybee population:
http://www.justfood.org/farmers/old/beeplague.pdf
Just trying to help others learn from my dumb mistake. It seemed like such a good idea at the time.
And I HATE those suckers....a hate which is only exceeded by Bald-faced hornets and liberal moonbats...
It's them stem cells, I tell ya...
Somebody used stem cells to cross yellow jackets with kudzu.
It does seem like a good idea. If I run into that situation I'll know better, thanks, again.
My husband puts a length of conduit taped to the end of the shopvac hose, puts the end of the conduit right near the hole of the ground wasps, and leaves the shop vac on for an hour or so. Most of the wasps or bees are destroyed immediately, and we usually leave the thing there for several days and turn it on for an hour or more at dusk to get the whole nest. Over the course of a week this usually eliminates the whole nest with no poisons or fire or explosives - all of which have been tried, believe me! (c8
Now there is one restoration I'd have to think twice about - even if it IS a shoebox.
(I did have a medium to large bee's nest under the hood of a Falcon once - lit up my day pretty good when I popped the hood and 'discovered' it)
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