Perhaps this is the same "Free Trader" who sent the Gypsy Moth or perhaps the "Free Traitors" should send to France the African Killer Bees as a front line defense?

Unfortunately, humans drag a lot of crap around with them wherever they go (and in whatever age they may have traveled in).

I wonder though, do the Asian hornets take on the larger Bombus species?

Darryl

------------------------------------------------------------------------


Christoph Reuss wrote:
Imported with cheap crap from China to France, the aggressive Asian Hornet
is quickly spreading in Europe, killing whole bee hives and threatening to
extinct bees as the base of agricultural production for humans.

One can guess whether this is an accident of "Free" Trade or a deliberate part
of "the coming cull", but either way, the Free Traitors are to blame for it.

The cave-man propagandists may cynically talk of an "evolutionary victory"
of the Asian Hornet over the European Hornet and honeybees, but when this
is destroying the human food supply, it is time to "evolutionarily" deal
with the Free Traitors.

Chris


http://www.planetepassion.eu/WILDLIFE-IN-FRANCE/Asian-Hornet_Vespa-velutina-nigrithorax_Frelon%20asiatique_France.html

Asian Hornet - Vespa velutina nigrithorax - Frelon asiatique

First observed in 2005 the Asian Hornet is thought to have arrived in France from China in 2004, in a container of pottery passing through the port of Bordeaux. Since that date its spread throughout the neighboring regions has been rapid and often, in the initial stages, follows rivers and other watercourses.
...

Although the European Hornet will attack and kill the odd honey bee in small numbers as a 
food source for their larvae it does not present a problem, however the situation is far 
worse with the Asian Hornet and can lead to the destruction of the entire colony. The 
Asian Hornets will station themselves hovering at about 30cm from the entrance to the 
honey bee colony where they pounce on returning bees that are carrying pollen, fall to 
the ground with them, cut of the head with their mandibles and transport them to a tree. 
Here they remove the wings and legs before making a little "meat ball" that 
they transport back to their nest to feed their own larvae. Having found a colony, often 
a bee hive, they will sometimes arrive in numbers to take an easy food source one after 
another. The consequences for the bee colony can be catastrophic, if the flow of pollen 
into the hive is severely disrupted. Over time it will result in the death of some or all 
of the larvae and the queen wil!
 l either stop or reduce her egg production. This will lead to the decline of 
the colony, aging bees will die with few or no replacements to take their 
place. At best the colony will be vulnerable to disease due to the dead larvae 
and the overall weakness of the colony will lead to robbing. The colony will 
have little hope of over wintering.




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