- notify the mairie or communauté de communes.
- once notified, the mairie will contact FDGDON 37 (Féderation Départemental des Groupements de Défense contre les Organismes Nuisibles).
- FDGDON 37 will make contact with you and confirm whether you do indeed have frelons à pattes jaunes. To do this, a qualified person will make an identification from photos or dead specimens supplied by you or if necessary, visit your premises.
- reporting every individual Asian Hornet is important, as it helps to locate the nests.
- all the records are centralised to establish a database of this invasive species and monitor its distribution.
Yellow-legged Asian Hornet.
Note how dark overall it is, with a black thorax, not brown.
What should you do if there is a nest?Note how dark overall it is, with a black thorax, not brown.
To destroy inhabited nests it is advisable to call a specialist business (applicateur hygiéniste). A list of professionals who adhere to a code of best practice can be obtained from FDGDON 37 (email: contact@fdgdon37.fr).
Beware! It is dangerous to destroy the nest yourself.
- once destroyed, the pest controller will inform FDGDON 37.
- FDGDON 37 will inform your mairie.
For further information download the leaflet (téléchargez la plaquette d'information sur le frelon asiatique) available on this website (in French, with photos). You can also go to my previous post on Asian Hornets or the Muséum National de l'Histoire Naturelle factsheet (in French).
Susan
Source: The text in this post has been translated from the FDGDON 37 information leaflet, which local authorities are putting on their websites or displaying on their town notice boards. The photos and their captions in the post are mine.
Not an Asian Hornet.
This is a very large hoverfly.
Note the overall yellow, not dark, appearance.
This is a very large hoverfly.
Note the overall yellow, not dark, appearance.
Not an Asian Hornet.
This is a large potter wasp.
Note the extreme 'wasp waist'.
This is a large potter wasp.
Note the extreme 'wasp waist'.
Not an Asian Hornet.
This is a European Hornet.
Note the brown thorax and mainly yellow abdomen.
This is a European Hornet.
Note the brown thorax and mainly yellow abdomen.
3 comments:
Very informative Susan... nice to see Mellisa there; she was around just the other day.
Your big, dark potter-wasp is certainly something to look for; was it local? I'm sure that I have seen a shot of it used as an "Asian Hornet" in a newspaper report because I thought at the time that there was something wrong with the picture, but couldn't figure out what.
I might link directly to this post from the links pages on ours.
Interesting post with lots of important information. Thanks Diane
Tim: the potter wasp is Delta unguiculata, photographed collecting water from the tap in our back yard.
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