Outsmarting the Giant Hornets: Beekeeper's Innovative Method to Protect Honeybees

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  • Опубликовано: 21 сен 2024
  • In this video, Yuichi, a local beekeeper in Japan, demonstrates how to protect native Japanese honey bees from the attacks of Japanese giant hornets.
    The hornets are known to target honeybee colonies to steal pupae, larvae, and honey. Yuichi shows a unique method of capturing hornets using a glue sheet for mice.
    When a hornet gets trapped on the adhesive sheet, it releases pheromones that attract fellow hornets, leading them to also get stuck on the sheet.
    This technique helps protect Japanese honey bees from these aggressive predators.

Комментарии • 10 тыс.

  • @jonathandeller
    @jonathandeller 4 месяца назад +797

    The fact that hornets have a "Help me!" pheromone but not a "Stay away, it's a trap!" pheromone is the achilles heel of their species😂

    • @whatup3617
      @whatup3617 Месяц назад +50

      Yeah I think the only creatures that would have that would be natural prey or species that get hunted often and these pieces of horror usually are always feared

    • @SpicyCactus
      @SpicyCactus Месяц назад +22

      Absolute bozos

    • @MidnightPhant0m1
      @MidnightPhant0m1 24 дня назад +7

      No. They have a I found a target pheromone and a warning pheromone.

    • @mattperetin5440
      @mattperetin5440 19 дней назад

      ruclips.net/user/shortso_ZZsJILWIY

    • @simonphoenix3789
      @simonphoenix3789 8 дней назад +4

      probably because nothing in nature is actually enough of a threat for them to evolve such a signal, at least until now. If they find a bee colony, its pretty much game over for the bees if more than a few of them show up.

  • @pietro9845
    @pietro9845 Год назад +22885

    "Ok, human, we give you honey and you protect us from the terrifying lovercraftian monsters that haunt us" seems like a mutually beneficial relationship to me.

    • @nokia-gm8gv
      @nokia-gm8gv Год назад +123

      lol

    • @sabrinapaul22
      @sabrinapaul22 Год назад +60

      😂

    • @gabrielklinefelter1444
      @gabrielklinefelter1444 Год назад +311

      Japanese people will conquer any barrier of challenge 😂

    • @jaysong_stick
      @jaysong_stick Год назад +674

      It actually is, honeybees know they can move out(they do if conditions aren’t maintained by beekeepers) they also know if they stay here their honey gets taken occasionally.
      Bee’s decided the cost is worth it.

    • @thegrimcritic5494
      @thegrimcritic5494 Год назад +48

      Okay, BREAK! (Everyone claps hands and walks to their defensive positions.)

  • @lemon9.9
    @lemon9.9 9 месяцев назад +7127

    The fact that this gets more effective over time is insane

    • @Quinna5537
      @Quinna5537 9 месяцев назад +166

      Yuichi has got some mad bee protecting skills

    • @Yurei.Fox666
      @Yurei.Fox666 9 месяцев назад +217

      For real, infinite trap glitch

    • @bighitentertainment001
      @bighitentertainment001 8 месяцев назад

      @@Yurei.Fox666LOL

    • @bullet4459
      @bullet4459 8 месяцев назад +72

      1 turns to 2, 2 turns to 4, 4 turns to 8 and soon enough you have them all

    • @jony6107
      @jony6107 8 месяцев назад +9

      ​@@user-mp7pj3bq5h it's not like he can add another one, replace the one that is full

  • @junnichie
    @junnichie 9 месяцев назад +2474

    Can we just acknowledge how brave Yuichi is by being this close without ANY protection?

    • @ohok1149
      @ohok1149 8 месяцев назад +281

      He has the power of God and anime on his side.

    • @AngrySeagullBoi
      @AngrySeagullBoi 8 месяцев назад +71

      @@ohok1149he’s the God of Japanese Bees

    • @CEREBRALKILLER
      @CEREBRALKILLER 7 месяцев назад +67

      It's because he is calm and not thrashing about.

    • @kellykane7586
      @kellykane7586 7 месяцев назад +5

      Came to say the same
      ❤️yuichi

    • @socallawrence
      @socallawrence 7 месяцев назад +15

      Real men never use any kind of protection 😉

  • @boardmandave
    @boardmandave 11 месяцев назад +5211

    Giant hornet nests have been found in America and their bees don't know how to kill them, this video could be essential to bee survival worldwide so thank you it seems extremely effective

    • @rdowg
      @rdowg 10 месяцев назад +441

      Ive been seeing TONS of videos on facebook of american bee farmers doing this exact method
      Gotta love how our society as a whole will gather around to share their hatred of these hornets😂

    • @zilfondel
      @zilfondel 9 месяцев назад +100

      Apparently the American bumblebee has been pretty successful in defending against these things.

    • @FromBeyondTheGrave1
      @FromBeyondTheGrave1 9 месяцев назад +176

      @@zilfondelProblem is the “American” honeybee is actually the European Bumblebee and has killed off the actual pollinators native to America

    • @crish9847
      @crish9847 9 месяцев назад +37

      ​@@FromBeyondTheGrave1we need to start training out bees

    • @avgrim7729
      @avgrim7729 9 месяцев назад

      The European honey bee is an invasive species to America and there is a threat of them becoming Africanized. It's already happening in the lower 48 states and these things are vicious. Will attack and kill anything that moves!! You don't even have to be close to their hive.

  • @sergiomuniz350
    @sergiomuniz350 Год назад +6751

    This guy is just standing calmly and talking casually next to these giant hornets and then he just takes them down with ease. Big props to this guy

    • @ourcreeper1018
      @ourcreeper1018 Год назад +339

      and he casually mentions that their sting can kill humans while he is putting his finger near a hornet in the trap

    • @MrSeekerOfPeace
      @MrSeekerOfPeace Год назад +159

      he's catching a beedrill and then steps on it because it isn't a shiny

    • @ThatOneSharky
      @ThatOneSharky Год назад +28

      @@MrSeekerOfPeace Wasnt a Max Lvl Shiny, gotta do more farming.

    • @Ruskieit
      @Ruskieit Год назад +8

      Yeah, unbelievable... It almost looks like it's his job!

    • @snekback.
      @snekback. Год назад +58

      @@ourcreeper1018 It can kill humans if you have an allergic reaction or are stung a lot, a single sting will probably hurt like hell and corrode some flesh but likely isnt deadly

  • @Moderatelydisagreeable
    @Moderatelydisagreeable Год назад +8065

    “First I disarm the hornet” as he stomps it multiple times. Lol. I will have to remember that line. I think this is a good defense. We have yellow jackets that raid hives here in the US.

    • @charlesward8196
      @charlesward8196 Год назад +336

      In the US Yellowjackets are ALSO an important part of the ecosystem. They are CRITICAL for control of cabbage looper moths, and tomato horn worms in my vegetable garden. I just discourage nesting close to or on my house.

    • @td4190
      @td4190 Год назад +73

      Soda bottle technique is better for yellow jackets. But I agree looks like a very good method

    • @ambulocetusnatans
      @ambulocetusnatans Год назад +234

      @@charlesward8196 But can you tell the difference between a native Yellow Jacket (Vespula pensylvanica) and the invasive German Yellow Jacket (Vespula germanica)?
      I own a pest control company, and even I have a difficult time differentiating them.

    • @ambulocetusnatans
      @ambulocetusnatans Год назад

      @@td4190 Shhh, I'll tell you a secret.
      Shop vac.

    • @moc617
      @moc617 Год назад +153

      This had me dying 😂 🤣
      That looked a little bit more than disarming but what do I know I’m not dealing with these giant ass hornets where I live 😂

  • @cactusthestupid7222
    @cactusthestupid7222 8 месяцев назад +1257

    It's interesting how intelligent they are to try to help each other. Unfortunately there are man-made horrors beyond their comprehension (glue trap).

    • @Alpha_GameDev-wq5cc
      @Alpha_GameDev-wq5cc 5 месяцев назад

      Unfortunately, you are not intelligent enough to understand the meaning of pheromones… “human”

    • @ant7936
      @ant7936 5 месяцев назад +70

      But not intelligent enough to send a helicopter with a winch.

    • @metalltitan
      @metalltitan 5 месяцев назад +76

      @@ant7936 A hornet has fallen into the glue-sheet in Leguro-City!

    • @nicokroes1066
      @nicokroes1066 4 месяца назад +34

      It's a sick trap. Imagine aliens using this method to exterminate us. Like a panic inducing gas, so someone screams, we check what's happening, but upon coming close we also start screaming

    • @kalangototal
      @kalangototal 4 месяца назад

      These wasps are true monsters in the West, they kill and devour whole bees colonies indiscriminately, and can endanger the entire global ecosystem.
      horrors these like killing bees indiscriminately, this wasp is a real plague ...
      If bees disappear, the world ends.

  • @alxmtncstudio2066
    @alxmtncstudio2066 Год назад +3575

    As someone who's seen those giant orange hornets decimating bee colonies around my neighorhood, watching their trial now was an absolute pleasure. A trial like in the old days.
    Where I live, they are an invasive species from Asia, wildly dangerous for our ecosystems.

    • @nandihalm7651
      @nandihalm7651 Год назад +79

      Yes they are dangerous for the ecosystem and sometimes for humans, and its a good method to eliminate them, but they are only insects with natural instincts. They are not evel or cruel, but if you enjoy their suffering, you are a real cruel person :(

    • @mynamesjudge
      @mynamesjudge Год назад

      ​@@nandihalm7651 Yeah, it's pretty scary seeing adults here hating animals simply for existing. This disregard for life that people deem below them is how we ended up causing the extinction of passenger pigeons, Mexican grizzlies, Carolina Parakeets, among others, and caused the near extinction of most mega fauna still remaining in North America.
      Adults acting like that weird kid who used to burn ants with a magnifying glass simply because they exist in nature.

    • @jasondrepin
      @jasondrepin Год назад

      @@nandihalm7651please don’t humanize a killer wasp. They literally decapitate bees

    • @brunovlaminck9901
      @brunovlaminck9901 Год назад

      he forget the worst species are humans and he proved it@@nandihalm7651

    • @schaftsson7392
      @schaftsson7392 Год назад +21

      They look like drunk break dancing..))

  • @FirstNameLastName-ud2oj
    @FirstNameLastName-ud2oj 9 месяцев назад +2913

    “Next we disarm the hornet🥾💢🥾💢🥾💢”

    • @CaramelOnFire
      @CaramelOnFire 4 месяца назад +221

      ah yes, disarm it from life

    • @icey984
      @icey984 4 месяца назад +18

      Hahaha so true

    • @Amioni
      @Amioni 4 месяца назад +11

      😂👊

    • @johnludwig8448
      @johnludwig8448 4 месяца назад +9

      😂😂😂😂

    • @brianchu8147
      @brianchu8147 4 месяца назад +107

      The subtitle is a bit of an awkward translation. He says “半殺し” (はんごろし hangoroshi) which means “beat half to death” or “mostly kill”

  • @GAMERIN-rn6dj
    @GAMERIN-rn6dj Год назад +1647

    This man is talking with an straight face while wearing no protection near those things.
    Respect

    • @Goetibo
      @Goetibo Год назад +63

      balls of steel

    • @brockhoffer7712
      @brockhoffer7712 Год назад +15

      He must be of Japanese/Ukrainian breed.. 😎

    • @henningpeters8833
      @henningpeters8833 Год назад +25

      Hornets are usually NOT aggressive againts humans (like wasps), as long as they don't feel threatened by you. But in germany, hornets are highly protected, so this method would by highly illegal and can be fined with 10000€ and more. - although I understand the beekeepers intent....

    • @GAMERIN-rn6dj
      @GAMERIN-rn6dj Год назад +34

      @@henningpeters8833 Different countries Different rules

    • @JaggedMercenary
      @JaggedMercenary Год назад

      @@brockhoffer7712 Don't ever compare Japanese greatness to that subhuman filth, got that?

  • @lyserl
    @lyserl 5 месяцев назад +273

    Imagine just chilling in your home and hearing your natural giant enemy stuck and struggling on your roof 💀

    • @AsAboveISoBelow
      @AsAboveISoBelow Месяц назад +18

      *Sits by fireplace, drinking honey tea, reading a good bee book* Mmm yes... suffer...

    • @pasqallysquigglyjunior277
      @pasqallysquigglyjunior277 Месяц назад +2

      Lmao😭😭😭😭💀

    • @brendafisher6215
      @brendafisher6215 15 дней назад +1

      I wondered about that too. Would the noise cause distress in the hive

    • @F1guRas
      @F1guRas День назад

      @@AsAboveISoBelowwatching bee movie

  • @GuiltyGaming
    @GuiltyGaming Год назад +2431

    5:26
    “Ah shit, bro! I need help!”
    “I’m coming, bro-shit! Bro, I need help!”
    “I’m coming, bro-shit! Bro, I need help!”
    “I’m coming, bro-shit! Bro, I need help!”
    “I’m coming, bro-shit! Bro, I need help!”
    “I’m coming, bro-shit! Bro, I need help!”
    “I’m coming, bro-shit! Bro, I need help!”
    “I’m coming, bro-shit! Bro, I need help!”
    “I’m coming, bro-shit! Bro, I need help!”

    • @RooneyAlberto.
      @RooneyAlberto. 8 месяцев назад +45

      G.O.A.T! 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂🔥

    • @lyteyearz5810
      @lyteyearz5810 6 месяцев назад +63

      Vicious cycle 😂😂😂😂

    • @matybaybump4565
      @matybaybump4565 6 месяцев назад +34

      Endless hell !!!😂😂😂🤣

    • @BDOT310
      @BDOT310 5 месяцев назад +42

      “I’m coming, bro-shit! I need help!”

    • @ebtinz9161
      @ebtinz9161 5 месяцев назад +23

      Reminds me of that Meseeks Rick and a Morty episode.
      “He roped me into this”

  • @jjdelany8130
    @jjdelany8130 Год назад +6224

    I like how he "disarms" him by stepping on him.

    • @Laneous14
      @Laneous14 Год назад +515

      Hard to be armed when you're squashed flat. As all hornets and wasps deserve.

    • @TheThunderKeki
      @TheThunderKeki Год назад +383

      The real translation is "half kill"

    • @MikehMike01
      @MikehMike01 Год назад +54

      Just like government

    • @enjoythestruggle
      @enjoythestruggle Год назад +204

      @@Laneous14 Bruh no. They do have a place in nature. The beekeeper is right to protect his bees, however there's no point in carrying a grudge against these animals or wishing to exterminate them. At the end of the day they're just animals who follow their instincts.

    • @DPWLVr
      @DPWLVr Год назад +16

      The workers are actually female. (I think)

  • @oakalquine5484
    @oakalquine5484 Год назад +6126

    i would legitimately rather have to fend off bear attacks on a regular basis than deal with these flying nightmares. this man has a whole different format of backbone.

    • @samw8452
      @samw8452 Год назад +395

      So calmly standing there as several murder hornets fly around. Samuri have nothing on that man's bravery!!

    • @CTZS
      @CTZS Год назад +483

      Let us know how much glue you need for the bears.

    • @Blue_Azure101
      @Blue_Azure101 Год назад +63

      Looks like the size of a chicken nugget

    • @oakalquine5484
      @oakalquine5484 Год назад +144

      ​@@CTZS zero glue required, but i did need stitches. fortunately, the suturing needles are way smaller than these hornets' stingers, and i got anesthesia, and everything

    • @LordMoldoma
      @LordMoldoma Год назад +89

      Funnily enough, bears would probably rather deal with the hornets than with humans.

  • @klakatyklak6826
    @klakatyklak6826 8 месяцев назад +252

    It's insane how big these japanese hornets are. They can almost get off that sticky paper. That is nuts. Listen to their wings wow. So big and frightening looking.

    • @dex2531
      @dex2531 Месяц назад

      They can be found in North America now as an invasive species: Asian Giant murder hornet. They hunt and destroy native Bee species that have no defenses against them.

  • @bandana11111
    @bandana11111 Год назад +1547

    Here in the Netherlands Japanese Hornets are being sighted. As a beekeeper this is super helpful and informative!

    • @VelvetMagician
      @VelvetMagician Год назад +35

      Same here in the United States

    • @ErikB605
      @ErikB605 Год назад +37

      It's not the japanese hornet aka. giant asian hornet but the asian hornet. It's a lot smaller. Similar to our own hornets.

    • @MultiAnikan
      @MultiAnikan Год назад +17

      “Importent part of the evosystem”
      Procedes to glue them stuck to a board and then they die a slow death 😂
      An i missing something here?

    • @TheJunglecrab
      @TheJunglecrab Год назад +67

      @@MultiAnikanWell, that’s the point… If the hornet dies instantly, it won’t release the pheromones

    • @simpai941
      @simpai941 Год назад +58

      @@MultiAnikan There are thousands more. Hundreds of them in the same colony. Killing 20 or so won't hurt the ecosystem.

  • @Asatruction
    @Asatruction Год назад +2326

    As they became more and more, I was becoming legitimately afraid they would just collectively take off with the glue sheet still attached to them

    • @MikehMike01
      @MikehMike01 Год назад +94

      That is not physically possible, no matter how many hornets there are or how strong they are

    • @madworld.
      @madworld. Год назад +3

      😁

    • @GamerPyle
      @GamerPyle Год назад +26

      @@MikehMike01 ...why not? Isn't the same concept as an eagle flying with a fish in its talons?

    • @MikehMike01
      @MikehMike01 Год назад +214

      @@GamerPyle they push down on the paper when trying to fly, no net force. It’s the same as having a giant fan on a boat blowing in the sail, no movement at all

    • @Caitlin7142
      @Caitlin7142 Год назад +15

      Unless they all stop pushing and just use their wings and thats it

  • @MoonberryJam93
    @MoonberryJam93 Год назад +1382

    The especially genius part is how even if the hornet is only a little bit stuck, it always tries to bite the glue board, basically guaranteeing that it gets stuck

    • @acanthodactyl
      @acanthodactyl Год назад +120

      It's interesting to watch how the hornet at 3:56 struggles. While it seems that she's able to unstick her legs individually, the only way to do that is to use another leg in order to push the ground. But then the other leg is stuck so she can never actually free herself

    • @mariushorn9481
      @mariushorn9481 Год назад +21

      @@acanthodactyl she maybe can if she steps on another hornet

    • @gunnerhiro394
      @gunnerhiro394 Год назад +42

      ​@@mariushorn9481- She's thinking "hmm, do I step on my compadre's head and push it further in the glue, so I can go free? Yeah, why not"?🤣

    • @stevethea5250
      @stevethea5250 Год назад +1

      @@gunnerhiro394 wrong timestamp ?

    • @jayhair4643
      @jayhair4643 Год назад +19

      because it is a biochemical roboter without any ability to reason

  • @trevinpower
    @trevinpower 9 месяцев назад +991

    It makes me sad when the regular bees get stuck too. They're the cutest most precious things in the world and they deserve everything.

    • @kaylenvee8150
      @kaylenvee8150 9 месяцев назад +304

      Doesn't happen often, as since the glue trap is placed right above the hive, the bees can sense from the pheromones that hornets are nearby and will hide inside their hive to stay safe. But talk to the bees and I guarantee you, they'll happily take one bee death if it also means ten hornets die with them lol

    • @xfirefox_x
      @xfirefox_x 9 месяцев назад +185

      ​@@kaylenvee8150Just talked to the bees and you are right!

    • @IronicHavoc
      @IronicHavoc 9 месяцев назад +73

      Getting that close to a bunch of hornets it was probably going to be in danger whether the glue was there or not

    • @shaystern2453
      @shaystern2453 9 месяцев назад +5

      yes, give them everything

    • @MrMeddyman
      @MrMeddyman 8 месяцев назад

      They are eusocial insects that are essentially slaves to a greater collective, they die when they sting because their individual lives, when they detect smoke they bunch up and willingly burn to death to protect the collective, male drones impregnate the queen and then literally off themselves because going on living would just tax the hives resources when they have no use. By their own rules the lives of each individual is basically worthless in their own little society unless it serves the colony so there's really no point to puppifying them. It's not even out of empathy or a sense of duty, it's because they share DNA so deem it unnecessary to prioritize themselves as if the tribe survives a part of them will always live on in the gene pool unlike other animals. Self-sacrificing behavior is also reinforced through the queen's pheromones which like in ants basically strip the individual of any free will.
      Bees in their totality are vital to the ecosystem, but by their own rules the lives of each individual bee is incredibly lacking in value.

  • @Bullseyearchery
    @Bullseyearchery Год назад +975

    This is brilliant. Methods like this need to be used here in the west. We can learn a lot from the Japanese Beekeepers.

    • @bloodaonadeline8346
      @bloodaonadeline8346 11 месяцев назад +14

      it is used here

    • @lettus143
      @lettus143 11 месяцев назад +11

      Do we have anything that aggressive in the states? I feel like part of what makes this work is the fact that the bees retreat, making it safe to put out a trap. I'd hate to accidentally kill my hive.

    • @Bullseyearchery
      @Bullseyearchery 11 месяцев назад +14

      @lettus143 Asian Hornets have been seen in a few states in small numbers in the past 3 years, I believe.
      Using the sticky would be a stand over it job. Put a hornet onto the pad and let it draw in others. You can keep tabs on your Bee's at the same time. The chances of seeing the Hornets are very slim, though.

    • @lonewolf6928
      @lonewolf6928 9 месяцев назад +1

      It's cruel.

    • @FarewellRocketShip1
      @FarewellRocketShip1 9 месяцев назад +2

      They got it from us

  • @SamBiscuit-bn7jg
    @SamBiscuit-bn7jg Год назад +864

    This man is braver than I am. Not only is he standing near these giant hornets, but he stomps on one while two others are buzzing around very close by

    • @dm44444
      @dm44444 Год назад +62

      Yea that really got me lol. One once got in my house....I vacuumed it out, wrapped the entire vacuum in duct tape and threw the whole thing out. 🤣🤣🤣 Never will I casually stomp one omg

    • @markogaudiosi5243
      @markogaudiosi5243 Год назад +41

      ​@@dm44444 You two are Gen Z, i presume?

    • @sekischro5093
      @sekischro5093 Год назад

      yuck boomer alert

    • @MonochromaticPrism
      @MonochromaticPrism Год назад +43

      Insects tend to have very one-track minds. The fact that the hornets are showing up following a "hive raid" pheromone signal mean they aren't likely to care about nearby humans.

    • @KrotowX
      @KrotowX Год назад +25

      Hornets are more determined and much less trigger-happy than yellowjackets. European hornets are even "friendly" at this aspect. You can stand literally near nest for a while and they will not bother you. Poking the nest is not good idea though :) At last summer had a surprize during lawn moving when realized that hornets made a nest in a tree where I worked around at 1-2 meter distance from nest entry. Few "tenants" sat around hole with a beer and chips to view how I'm working.

  • @ChachiMcSwaqq
    @ChachiMcSwaqq Год назад +1259

    I feel both immensely satisfied watching them struggle, and a little bad watching them struggle. But such is life 😂

    • @annedebecker8385
      @annedebecker8385 Год назад +159

      I feel the same as you, both satisfied to know the bees are protected and sad to see these hornets desperately struggling to get out of the trap...Imagining that they will die of exhaustion for long hours does not please me. at all, I wish their agony was short. I know, "they are only insects" but they are living beings and such a death is horrible.

    • @Datenschutz_Datenschutz
      @Datenschutz_Datenschutz Год назад

      Hornets doesen't deserve to live.... They are useless

    • @dingus6317
      @dingus6317 Год назад +135

      I do not feel bad about it. These are evil hellspawned creatures who stung me 5 times on my foot when I was 5 years old for no reason. What purpose do they even serve in the ecosystem? At least bees pollinate flowers and produce delicious honey.

    • @YourSweatyUncle
      @YourSweatyUncle Год назад

      ⁠@@dingus6317overpopulation control like all predator species, just look at humans, these days we got no natural enemies and now we are 8 bil humans

    • @TerrariumDiscoveryGamingMore
      @TerrariumDiscoveryGamingMore Год назад +3

      @@annedebecker8385 Props to you

  • @JoshBreakdowns
    @JoshBreakdowns 4 месяца назад +102

    "Their sting causes excruciating pain and can kill a human"
    *sticks finger right next to the stinger*

    • @takatacheroki2624
      @takatacheroki2624 Месяц назад +3

      My immediate reaction to that was “DO NOT TOUCH IT!!”

  • @temerson2
    @temerson2 Год назад +1123

    The powerful sound of their wings, even with one of them disabled is such an indicator of the power of these hornets and the danger that they present to the honeybee species. Even I as a being who is 100x the size of these creatures, is fearful of what they are capable of.

    • @coyotelong4349
      @coyotelong4349 Год назад +91

      Literally they sounded like the engines on a B-52 bomber when flapping their wings at the same time on that glue board

    • @crussty
      @crussty Год назад +19

      you must be tiny

    • @temerson2
      @temerson2 Год назад +63

      @@crussty I’m just a funny little guy.

    • @g60force
      @g60force Год назад +1

      @@temerson2 the term is stand-up midget XD

    • @AdamTheAd-vanc3d
      @AdamTheAd-vanc3d Год назад +18

      They sound like , when the grass is being cut outside.

  • @Palindrome3945
    @Palindrome3945 Год назад +862

    As much as I fear these monstrosities, I got to respect their loyalty to help the bros

    • @josh0156
      @josh0156 Год назад

      Sisters, actually. Male hive insects only exist long enough to mate and then die. So they wouldn't be out scouting like this.

    • @ancuruadh6027
      @ancuruadh6027 Год назад +43

      Except for a handful of drones that never leave the hive, social insects are all female. :)

    • @sigma_frenchie4075
      @sigma_frenchie4075 Год назад +157

      ​@@ancuruadh6027Oh great, now I can say "women ☕" when a hornet gets stuck in glue

    • @ancuruadh6027
      @ancuruadh6027 Год назад

      @@sigma_frenchie4075 =.=

    • @Dingusdoofus
      @Dingusdoofus Год назад +28

      @@sigma_frenchie4075
      Hmph, women

  • @merced175
    @merced175 Год назад +249

    This process feeds on the principles of the positive feedback loop. As more hornets get trapped they release more pheromones, making more get trapped, releasing more pheromones and so on and so forth.. clever.

  • @Xxbaybie
    @Xxbaybie 8 месяцев назад +21

    🐝- “shts sticky!”
    🐝- “oh come on it cant be that sticky!”

  • @dwaynezilla
    @dwaynezilla Год назад +2825

    The amount of bees lost to the sheet is nothing compared to what just one giant hornet is capable of!

    • @Karttibone
      @Karttibone Год назад +501

      What was this like 5-7 bees? A single hornet can kill about 40 bees per minute if they actually make into the hive. That's a hive wiped out within like 10-20 minutes if 10 hornets attack. Unless they're Japanese honeybees which also have adapted to kill hornets by cooking them in deathballs.

    • @synophi
      @synophi Год назад +104

      1 hornet has enough power to kill 1000 bees before it dies

    • @mudge002able
      @mudge002able Год назад +163

      @@Karttibone Yeah I saw a nature documentary where similar hornets were just cutting hundreds of bees in half easily left and right. Each hornet was like a juggernaut compared to the bees.

    • @michaelwijaya2664
      @michaelwijaya2664 Год назад +24

      And one bee getting stepped on by my dog is already enough to make me about to puke

    • @JuanSchwartz9
      @JuanSchwartz9 Год назад +17

      @@Karttibone death balls? 😳

  • @oblivious108
    @oblivious108 Год назад +1370

    This guy is doing this without ANY protection! Major respect.

    • @tripjet999
      @tripjet999 Год назад +68

      Actually, very foolish.

    • @bromodz2309
      @bromodz2309 Год назад +88

      The cameraman never dies

    • @liveisamelody9413
      @liveisamelody9413 Год назад +26

      actually they can sting thrue thin leather so imagine how pointless a suit would be.

    • @tankerock
      @tankerock Год назад +68

      trained actor bees, had me fooled for a bit too

    • @kaiyagami9376
      @kaiyagami9376 Год назад +16

      ​​@@tripjet999well considering that the hornet can sting through the safety gear anyway its actually useless

  • @HBADGERBRAD
    @HBADGERBRAD 10 месяцев назад +807

    Those hornets are terrifying 😢 even the sound of their wings is nightmare inspiring. Normally I’m all about balance in nature but I don’t know the benefits of these monsters. He’s very brave.

    • @koboldcatgirl
      @koboldcatgirl 9 месяцев назад +139

      Hornets pollinate flowers and control lots of other pests! They contribute a lot, we just don't want them eating the honeybees.

    • @Steph489
      @Steph489 8 месяцев назад +101

      @@koboldcatgirl honeybees do the same thing and aren’t as dangerous and aggressive

    • @olliebird1891
      @olliebird1891 8 месяцев назад +138

      They are super important where they are native from, but in the areas they’re beginning to get invasive in, they just cause pain and damage to the environment.

    • @mouthwaterin
      @mouthwaterin 8 месяцев назад

      Honeybees are pretty mid at pollination tho​@@Steph489

    • @themagnanimous1246
      @themagnanimous1246 8 месяцев назад +38

      ​@@Steph489 if there was no reason for these hornets to exist, they wouldn't. They play a part somewhere in the great cycle

  • @renegadetla9331
    @renegadetla9331 9 месяцев назад +242

    I appreciate that you mentioned that they shouldn’t be killed indiscriminately, just when your bees need protecting. Even the terrible creatures like this are still creatures on this earth, and we shouldn’t kill anything for the crime of existing.
    But to protect your bees is necessary ❤❤❤

    • @brattrox2939
      @brattrox2939 9 месяцев назад +19

      Yup thats what he said in the video. That this method really just targeted the ones who were targeting his bees which is why it's such a good method 😁

    • @alexanderbohm607
      @alexanderbohm607 8 месяцев назад +30

      i generally concur with this sentiment but then i saw the size of those things......naw hell naw.......have at those things. They're practically the size of mice......a flying stinging murder mouse. Nope

    • @meri0312
      @meri0312 8 месяцев назад +5

      ​@@alexanderbohm607
      I know right. I agree with that but at the same time it is a crime for something like that to exist and they need to be punished for it.

    • @alexanderbohm607
      @alexanderbohm607 8 месяцев назад

      @meri0312 it's like almost heretical, an offense to God and nature

    • @elimgrc1292
      @elimgrc1292 6 месяцев назад

      This includes all viruses...creatures of the earth

  • @MattttG3
    @MattttG3 Год назад +573

    I live in the USA and do not raise bees, nor do I ever look it up. But this was recommended and it’s ingenious, i thumbs up your intelligence and drive to protect your baby bees. God bless you brother

    • @scintillam_dei
      @scintillam_dei Год назад

      god doesn't exist
      according to idiots.

    • @earmunchermuncher7639
      @earmunchermuncher7639 Год назад

      Fuck wasps/ hornets. Sure, some are relatively nice, but their death will be a small sacrifice for greatness.(world peace)

    • @evefreyasyrenathegoddessev4016
      @evefreyasyrenathegoddessev4016 Год назад +1

      What ns, this is beyond efd and krùèł!

    • @evefreyasyrenathegoddessev4016
      @evefreyasyrenathegoddessev4016 Год назад

      And I am THE only God / Goddess / Queen / Princess / Lady / Star etc - the misused big terms God and bless and íntèł and ingenious and the number and the unsuitable name Matt must be edited out and changed!

    • @evefreyasyrenathegoddessev4016
      @evefreyasyrenathegoddessev4016 Год назад

      All beings should be protected from èvíł hùm’ns - just leave those hornets alone, they haven’t done anything and cannot even get in, or give them a different empty hive and they will leave that hive alone!

  • @derekwilliams1066
    @derekwilliams1066 Год назад +547

    This is a great idea. Here in America, these are invasive, not native, hornets. I hope the people in the Pacific Northwest start using this method. It seems very effective.

    • @Lawnmower737
      @Lawnmower737 Год назад +20

      I thought that they were all gone and haven’t successfully made nesting sites?

    • @roberthooper8883
      @roberthooper8883 Год назад +16

      @@Lawnmower737 Wrong- they are NOT all gone

    • @Bleda412
      @Bleda412 Год назад +51

      @@roberthooper8883 Do you have any evidence to support your claim? The WSDA reported that there were no confirmed sightings in 2022. I am unable to find any information about sightings in BC or sightings in 2023.

    • @roberthooper8883
      @roberthooper8883 Год назад +8

      @@Bleda412 So because you are either too lazy or too inept to locate the sightings of them, you don't think they exist? and THEN you want ME to do your research for you? Is that REALLY what you are saying?

    • @sasquatch8268
      @sasquatch8268 Год назад +94

      @@roberthooper8883He said if you have any evidence. You know, to the claim of you stating they are not all gone.

  • @Apocalypse_Meow...
    @Apocalypse_Meow... Год назад +504

    An awesome example of a person using intelligence, knowledge and simple tools to accomplish the goal of saving his entire hive, instead of spraying horrible Monsanto chemicals everywhere. He understands these mini-monsters have an important role in nature and just targets the problem scouts. Zero collateral damage. Bravo!

    • @heron6462
      @heron6462 Год назад +42

      My Japanese father-in-law, when he was a child, was posted near the family beehives with an old tennis racket to 'disarm' any visiting hornets.

    • @oldegrunt
      @oldegrunt Год назад +4

      But they also have people who specialize in hunting down the nests, it's just the farmer can be a bit more forgiving about the hornets effects overall as he has found a way to help control them.

    • @brunodm1573
      @brunodm1573 Год назад +19

      I would say that the few honey bees which also were trapped in the glue, are the collateral damage. :p

    • @corvus1970
      @corvus1970 Год назад +1

      @@brunodm1573 Glue traps can also trap the feathers of small birds.

    • @ElFreakinCid
      @ElFreakinCid Год назад +10

      @@brunodm1573 Honeybees are known to give up their lives for the hive if needed. It's sad that they got caught on it too, but the traps still ensured the survival of many, many more bees.

  • @VULGARxRM
    @VULGARxRM 9 месяцев назад +25

    "Next, I disarm the hornet" - proceeds to stomp the shit out of it

  • @dalel3608
    @dalel3608 Год назад +594

    They can almost escape when only their feet touch, but the moment they bite that glue they are done for. Thank you Yuichi for this idea.

    • @billtalent1
      @billtalent1 Год назад +106

      even though it looks like they can escape, the glue is stretching, not breaking. the moment their foot touches the glue they'd need to cut off their foot to escape

    • @31acruz
      @31acruz Год назад +21

      no, the ones that landed were trapped by their feet, there is no getting free once they touch it.

    • @vidsforsquids
      @vidsforsquids Год назад +4

      “Almost”

    • @irieite9666
      @irieite9666 Год назад +9

      What I want to know is what's actually killing them? Exhaustion? Stress?

    • @pook6212
      @pook6212 Год назад +51

      @@Dawn-Songs Did you not understand? These hornets are pests and can be dangerous to humans. Yuichisan is doing what he must to protect his hive.

  • @thebaa63
    @thebaa63 Год назад +1370

    I cannot tell you how satisfying this video is and how much of a smile this leaves me with.
    Thank you Protector of Bees!!!

    • @peasantsarerevolting9343
      @peasantsarerevolting9343 Год назад +24

      He's only half done! He needs to burn them now! It's the only way to be sure...

    • @alejandrocasas1455
      @alejandrocasas1455 Год назад +36

      I feel a little bad for hornets ... 🙁

    • @MAGGOT_VOMIT
      @MAGGOT_VOMIT Год назад +18

      I wonder, if enough of them get stuck on the glue trap, will the glue trap fly away? 😀

    • @DocWolph
      @DocWolph Год назад +1

      Comes from knowing what he is doing.

    • @theusher2893
      @theusher2893 Год назад +6

      I was talking with a colleague earlier today about the global decline of honeybees. They need all the help they can get!

  • @KeytarArgonian
    @KeytarArgonian Год назад +878

    I appreciate he points out that the goal is not to eradicate them, and it’s purely a countermeasure to control a population rather an extermination.

    • @jgwentworth6735
      @jgwentworth6735 Год назад

      screw that exterminate them and I'm not joking

    • @JeroAstra
      @JeroAstra Год назад

      Theyve become an invasive species in the US and Europe. I think its high time they be eradicated.

    • @alveolate
      @alveolate Год назад +58

      yes, that is extremely important. should probably emphasise that this is also in japan, where the giant hornets are native, so the considerations are very specific.
      i wonder what ingredient is in the sticky boards he calls "mouse glue sheets"... if those disperse some sort of fragrant aroma to attract mice, it might also attract other local wildlife, including possibly endangered species. if you're thinking of doing this DIY trap to protect your bees, do consider consulting an expert in local wildlife first.

    • @KeytarArgonian
      @KeytarArgonian Год назад +53

      @@alveolate they don’t produce an aroma, he has to first injure a Hornet which gives off its alarm scent, which is what makes bees/wasps/hornets swarm for protection which draws them, but this scent also acts as a deterrent for other things like bees for example, that’s why he didn’t lose anywhere near as many bees on the sheet, that would be a strong deterrent. But you are correct these things should be watched over and never just left anywhere for an extended period.

    • @adb888
      @adb888 Год назад +33

      @@KeytarArgonian I believe his point was that if it did give off an aroma, other mammals might be tempted to investigate it. I believe most (all?) glue sheets have no aroma and are meant to go down in areas where rodents will walk across them though, so no concern there. If anything, I'd be more concerned about a bird landing on it looking for an easy bug snack. Probably better to have a lid/roof on it, so that the hornets can still get in, but nothing else can after you "bait" it with an "unarmed" hornet.

  • @huang_keso
    @huang_keso 6 месяцев назад +20

    "i disarm the hornets"
    Steps on it 😂

  • @challis5513
    @challis5513 Год назад +375

    I can't believe the size of them and the sound their combined wings make.. Its like an old aeroplane. We get wasps, hornets, bumble bees and honey beez in south Africa, but our hornets etc are small compared to those Tyrannosaurus ones you dealt with.

    • @dfpguitar
      @dfpguitar Год назад +19

      Yeah they seem much more like machines than insects, so strong ! But I suppose there are a lot of giant beetles in the world which are far bigger and heavier than the hornets, which can also fly.

    • @samrittenhouse2534
      @samrittenhouse2534 Год назад +5

      We have a buckeye tree that's in bloom right now and the Humm of bumble bees in it is quite loud. Yeah these murder hornets I luckily have never dealt with as a beekeeper myself, I have heard they can easily sting through a bee suit

    • @ungabunga115
      @ungabunga115 Год назад

      @@samrittenhouse2534 I believe it given the size of those fuckers.

    • @imnotchikao6317
      @imnotchikao6317 Год назад +5

      The speed that it travels too is astonishing as well. I have seen the stings and the aftermath of these things. This bee keeper has some major balls to be standing next to them.

    • @andrewmoir5884
      @andrewmoir5884 Год назад +2

      Although getting stung by a rooiby (red bee/paper wasp) is no joke.

  • @elenalohrey1971
    @elenalohrey1971 Год назад +1239

    Watching the hornets get stuck to the trap one by one put such an evil smile on my face. That was so awesome to watch.

    • @simspawn
      @simspawn Год назад +38

      :insert Jack Nicholson nod.gif here:

    • @Braddaddyx
      @Braddaddyx Год назад +15

      me 2 😀

    • @netweed09
      @netweed09 Год назад +49

      Honestly, if they ended up being Critically endangered down to 200 or so individuals - Nature would collectively hold up a W.

    • @Guy-Mann
      @Guy-Mann Год назад

      @@netweed09 Yeah screw all that ecosystem crap. Species go extinct all the time and nature soldiers on. Some people would go out of their way to preserve deadly intestinal parasites out of some childish principle of "respecting nature."

    • @burger698
      @burger698 Год назад +24

      I wish they had sticky paper for humans.

  • @erikhoryza9068
    @erikhoryza9068 Год назад +357

    Also knowing that 1 giant hornet can kill a minimum average of 2,000 bees/hive, 10-15 bees on the sheet is negligible. Great work!

    • @0doublezero0
      @0doublezero0 Год назад +18

      That's if they attack as a group of 20+ then yes. However, if its a few hornets then the hive has enough bees to form a "bee ball" to kill the hornets.

    • @X820NL
      @X820NL Год назад +12

      @@0doublezero0 That is only one species of bees that does that.

    • @0doublezero0
      @0doublezero0 Год назад +6

      @@X820NL Yes, but this video is in the country where that bee lives so it applies.

    • @Person01234
      @Person01234 Год назад +19

      @@0doublezero0 A bee ball will kill more bees than got stuck on the sheet. And that's not even taking into account the fact that the hornets will also kill the bees that are trying to ball them.

    • @Person01234
      @Person01234 Год назад +7

      @@X820NL Yes, the japanese honeybee, the kind of honeybee in the video presumably.

  • @authentictaco8166
    @authentictaco8166 7 месяцев назад +10

    I like how he mentions how it may seem cruel, but you fuck around and find out. Just shows he understands, and also knows how much it plays a role in their ecosystem. Even though these things are legit. Last bug id ever want to run into by mistake

  • @Brian-pz3wh
    @Brian-pz3wh Год назад +693

    Brilliant!! Truly this is so smart. No pesticides to mess with the bees that are so close, and totally minimizes danger to the bee keeper. This is so cool, gonna have to remember this one!

    • @nicknevco215
      @nicknevco215 Год назад

      use the natural defense to trap them with super fly paper

    • @PiwaiGee
      @PiwaiGee Год назад +5

      glue kills indiscriminately and isn't really eco-friendly but yeah if it's effective at keeping the bee colony safe without other chemicals it's okay. I hear some races of chickens are pretty effective against giant hornets

    • @NielsenDK-1
      @NielsenDK-1 Год назад +11

      @@PiwaiGee I think most chickens will eat hornets but they will eat the bees also.

    • @yanoriff8744
      @yanoriff8744 Год назад +5

      ​@Bowchikiwow Piwai I think because he is using one of the freshly killed Hornets to spread pheromones is okay for the bees. The main victims will be them, since the bees wouldn't respond to a "SOS" pheromones from their enemy.

    • @angelmendez-rivera351
      @angelmendez-rivera351 Год назад +2

      @@PiwaiGeeIf it's just a relatively small sheet of glue, over 90% of what will get stuck in it are hornets. Saying it's "indiscriminate" is wildly inaccurate.

  • @kajixdn
    @kajixdn Год назад +695

    thanks for the translation, these videos are honestly pretty informative and I'm definitely not just watching out of some sadistic pleasure I get out of seeing the hornets be completely and utterly foiled in their attack of the hive

  • @josh0156
    @josh0156 Год назад +456

    I was SUPER unsettled as he got close enough to touch the murder hornets and you could hear the extremely deep buzz of their huge wings. These two are braver than I'll ever be.

    • @tripjet999
      @tripjet999 Год назад +7

      Possibly a lot more foolish.

    • @WXVA9
      @WXVA9 Год назад +1

      I'm pretty sure that was an off screen lawnmower or power boat

    • @tomc.7520
      @tomc.7520 Год назад +1

      LOL Me too. Been in yellow jacket nest many times over the years. The murder hornets are things of nightmares.

    • @Pickleton
      @Pickleton Год назад +1

      Yeah and he's pointing at one of them as it's sticking out its stinger over and over. If that thing wasn't stuck, it would've probably killed the hell out of him.

    • @idontno0
      @idontno0 Год назад +4

      "murder" hornets 😂😂. You watch the news way too much.

  • @_V.Va_
    @_V.Va_ 6 месяцев назад +9

    Genuinely grateful that a Japanese channel takes the effort to add subtitles in English.
    Hell I'm thankful when ANY non English speaking channels do that.

  • @lisear2926
    @lisear2926 Год назад +512

    I love the way you "disarm" the first hornet 😄 And the whole procedure of trapping all of them is just wonderful 👍👍👍

    • @ID-8491
      @ID-8491 Год назад

      Wonderful? Are you a sadist??

    • @paullowman9131
      @paullowman9131 Год назад

      @@ID-8491 Well, you're certainly a virtue signaler. I hope that these things find you. Let's see you're attitude then.

    • @fsballer
      @fsballer Год назад +19

      Yeah I was thinking the word “dispatch” instead 😂

    • @unacceptablesisterpeter3431
      @unacceptablesisterpeter3431 Год назад +12

      I was thinking curb stomp but tomayto tomahto.

    • @jasonhunter3429
      @jasonhunter3429 Год назад

      Next I disarm *cocks gun*

  • @__-pl3jg
    @__-pl3jg Год назад +94

    I half expected the hornets to begin coordinating movements and fly off with the glue trap 😅. Those things are quite intimidating.

    • @Microwave1807
      @Microwave1807 9 месяцев назад

      And they were moving the trap

  • @TimeSurfer206
    @TimeSurfer206 Год назад +43

    And please keep in mind, when you're handling the Giant Hornet to get it onto the sheet...
    _DO NOT HANDLE THE GIANT HORNET!_
    *You do NOT want to get any of those "Hazard" pheromones on YOU!*

  • @AnarchyStockers
    @AnarchyStockers 8 месяцев назад +74

    RIP honeybees that got caught up in all this 😭

    • @aninhabitantofcarcosa9345
      @aninhabitantofcarcosa9345 7 месяцев назад +4

      They went probably to attack the invaders? Or what was the purpose of going next to their killers

    • @anzai5552
      @anzai5552 6 месяцев назад +1

      😭😭😭

  • @izinyosib821
    @izinyosib821 Год назад +676

    This is a well known trick in Japan. There even is a manufacturer that makes special sticky sheets that are attractive to them. Considering that there some 5000 hornets in a single, fully grown nest and there are very likely several around in the flight radius of a hornet, you will need a lot of sticky sheets. Particularly from August to October, when the new queens have hatched and the workers do not have much left to do, but they are still hungry. I'd say you are better off trying to trap queens in early spring and late fall. Alternatively there is another trap available in Japan that is laced with Fipronil that aims at the hornet grabbing some of the bait and bring it back to their next. As the Fipronil is fed to the larvae, the nest will be considerably weakened or even perish. In New Zealand they make that kind of bait themselves. But consider that you are putting an insecticide into nature, which may have an impact on other species and you will not even know about it.
    If you do try this method, keep the sheets out of rain, as it weakens the glue. Also, please, please keep them out of reach of other wildlife, such as birds. I.e. discard them properly after use.
    In Vietnam, they found that the local bees there spread parts of chicken dung around the nest entrance to cover the hornet pheromone, it is a different type of hornet though. I have not seen anyone try that yet in Japan :-)

    • @760mom
      @760mom Год назад +51

      I read the bees rub a leaf on the entrance to wipe off the pheromones of the hornet,I didn't catch the name of it. Sorry. Bees are so smart.

    • @eligebrown8998
      @eligebrown8998 Год назад +13

      5000 is a lot

    • @AegisAuras
      @AegisAuras Год назад +48

      @@760mom bees are really smart. I’ve seen videos of them dog piling giant hornets and flapping their wins to cause enough heat to kill the hornet trapped in the bee pile. Bees have higher heat tolerance than hornets.

    • @djnone8137
      @djnone8137 Год назад +4

      Thanks brave warrior, for enduring the wrath of this monstrosity for as an American I could not find the courage and would run to canada.

    • @zorkmid1083
      @zorkmid1083 Год назад

      Would the traps still work if you put them on the underside of a surface, so that Rain doesn't affect them?

  • @gregoryashton
    @gregoryashton 11 месяцев назад +587

    I could watch this for hours on end. Your camera skills and editing are perfect. I love the detail and your explanation of how and why you go about doing what you do to protect honey bees.

  • @meteora5673
    @meteora5673 Год назад +40

    We have started seeing some of these in Italy in the last decade, I almost got stung once. Read this, it might give you useful insights:
    Me and a business partner were tearing down a sound and lights momentary installation for a past day event in a villa. When had tie zipped some wood lights to a gazebo and the giant hornets had stuck to those during the night (so heads up, they react to UV light), the lights would fall down and hang from their cable if the zip ties were removed so we tried our best to do it safely. We mounted a swiss knife to a pole and started cutting the zip ties, all went well until the last. I personally cut the last zip tie myself, the light came down, the hornets flew away and I walked away by a few meters when suddenly I felt something stuck to my leg real fast. My reaction was completely instinctive and immediate, without even knowing what it was I slapped the hornet with the back of my hand with a very decise and fast movement.
    The hornet was hit perfectly and was launched to the ground where it remained, stunned by either my hit or the hit to the ground and then my colleague smartly took no chances and cut the abdomen off of it. The hornet was dead rather quickly but the abdomen kept stinging for as long as we bothered watching, which was more than a bunch of minutes! This means those hornets can potentially sting an indefinite amount of times, be very careful when you mess with them and only do so if extremely necessary!

    • @shcoco4032
      @shcoco4032 Год назад +8

      Italy's greatest military accomplishment /salute

    • @rockjockchick
      @rockjockchick Год назад

      Use the glue traps by uv lights maybe? They would clearly be an invasive species there and be killing your native bees.

  • @オットッケー
    @オットッケー 8 месяцев назад +24

    粘着シートにスズメバチが引っ掛るのを見ると何故かスカッとします。
    いつまでも見ていられます。

  • @humanwow5848
    @humanwow5848 Год назад +239

    Seeing those hornets next to the bees really gives you an idea of how giant they really are.

    • @chickenitis2735
      @chickenitis2735 Год назад +5

      Plus when the guy points his finger next to them. It's insane

    • @BaconIsNotBiceps
      @BaconIsNotBiceps Год назад +11

      I think I saw one fly by carrying a cow.

    • @Ruzzky_Bly4t
      @Ruzzky_Bly4t Год назад +6

      @@BaconIsNotBiceps They use them as military transports in my country.

    • @jessragan6714
      @jessragan6714 Год назад +2

      They are called "giant sparrow bees" in Japan. As Oatmeal said in his comics, even Godzilla wouldn't stay in Japan for very long if he saw those on the shore.

    • @Z0RDR4CK
      @Z0RDR4CK Год назад

      at first i've thought that the ants are the bees what made the hornets even more bigger, until i realized my mistake.
      because the creatures were so small, i didn't even realize that they didn't have any wings :)

  • @OceanSwimmer
    @OceanSwimmer Год назад +171

    I am impressed with your knowledge of both bees and hornets.
    What an innovative solution to the Japanese Hornet attack!
    1. Non - polluting
    2. Non-toxic
    3. Selectively kills the marauders only.
    4. Uses the hornets' defensive mechanism (pheromones) to waylay & eliminate them.
    5. Safe to use around multiple bee frames, economical.
    6. Used in conjunction with metal restrictors to prevent hornet entry into a beehive....very effective! 🏆❗
    Thank you for demonstrating your defense strategy. 🌺🐝
    Greetings from California!💕🐝

    • @sandsalamand3763
      @sandsalamand3763 Год назад +4

      The only issue is that birds can get stuck in it

    • @earlysda
      @earlysda Год назад +6

      Ocean, These glue traps have been known to kill birds, frogs, snakes, yes, anything too small to get off them.
      I think they are great too, but just be aware that there are some downsides.
      One other very good trap is a 2 liter plastic bottle with a little sweet pop left in the bottom, and a few small windows cut in the sides with the ledges pointing inward.

    • @ThereISABootONYourTHROAT
      @ThereISABootONYourTHROAT Год назад

      Building a double enclosure ( one circling the area with an 8 foot bubble then the next one very close to the hive) with 1/4 inch, or even smaller, holed wire mesh would work.
      Just ensure the mesh can allow the bees IN/OUT and STOP the hornets and other predators.
      That sticky method is ok but it is an indiscriminate killing method, hopefully bees do not land on it.

    • @scvcebc
      @scvcebc Год назад +10

      @@sandsalamand3763 Building a cage around the glue trap that allows the giant hornets in but not birds would work.

    • @CleverGirlAAH
      @CleverGirlAAH Год назад +1

      @@sandsalamand3763 The glue trap method is not going to put any birds on an endangered species list... It's a down side, but a very very very small one compared to say chemical use.

  • @phreph1
    @phreph1 Год назад +740

    This man plays a great role in the ecosystem

    • @Leto_0
      @Leto_0 Год назад +3

      How? He's not eating them...

    • @bigsnugga
      @bigsnugga Год назад +53

      @@Leto_0 hes helping bees who otherwise would die off

    • @Denetony
      @Denetony Год назад +14

      ​@@bigsnugga no, he was shying that he's destroying the local hornet population. The bees argument you make can be compared with a sheep farmer protecting their sheep from wolves

    • @Schlimpiwe
      @Schlimpiwe Год назад +25

      @@Denetony sheep are not an endangered species that also is crucial for pollination (which is far more relevant to us than wool or meat), thats really not a good comparison

    • @DanSalig-jq5mu
      @DanSalig-jq5mu Год назад

      That would be going downwards on the Darwin Scale

  • @cethin5803
    @cethin5803 7 месяцев назад +8

    I never thought that I'd be interested in common videos about bee keeping and hornets but this guy's videos are just so calming!

  • @Anderphage
    @Anderphage Год назад +646

    as someone with a phobia of stinging insects, it is very satisfying to watch them get stuck

    • @annhitchcock3093
      @annhitchcock3093 Год назад +27

      You’re not alone.

    • @triploshadow
      @triploshadow Год назад +75

      Its even scary watching them stuck and maniacly trying to sting the air out of pure hatred.

    • @yungbloodas3789
      @yungbloodas3789 Год назад +14

      Yes it does bring a smile to my face 🙂

    • @famemmainfo1801
      @famemmainfo1801 Год назад +5

      also hate hirnet but bees are helpfull for humans :)

    • @FreeMind4492
      @FreeMind4492 Год назад +17

      I hate stinging insects, especially hornets, but watching them getting stuck on a glued sheet isn't enough for me, I wanna watch them burning in fire.

  • @VenturiLife
    @VenturiLife Год назад +26

    3:56 - "What seems to be the problem my dudes? ...... oh."

  • @briagg4901
    @briagg4901 Год назад +516

    It’s fascinating how the hornets try to fight the glue trap once Stuck, you can see them biting and stinging the glue, trying to kill it, but the struggle only gets them more stuck

    • @Yotop-ch3wc
      @Yotop-ch3wc Год назад +9

      Thank god 😂

    • @vortex7733
      @vortex7733 Год назад +57

      kinda funny. its like trying to kill your car after you bonk your head off the trunk on accident. except it kills you in the end.

    • @cynthiajohnson6747
      @cynthiajohnson6747 Год назад +7

      That’s a lesson we can all learn from

    • @RennieAsh
      @RennieAsh Год назад +67

      In nature, biting and stinging works. They can bite through webs. Sting if caught by something and it's touching them.
      They don't know what "sticky glue" is lol

    • @PapaJodster
      @PapaJodster Год назад +19

      I think they're trying to cut themselves out of the glue rather than fight it.

  • @AffectionateForestHills-mx8sw
    @AffectionateForestHills-mx8sw 2 месяца назад +2

    Bees:"you receive:honey
    We receive: protection from those hornets"
    This guy:"fair deal"

  • @DarkDrai
    @DarkDrai Год назад +48

    The engineering of that trap's frame is excellent. Open it without sticking, then close it up with all the bugs inside. Very nice.

    • @namelessnavnls8060
      @namelessnavnls8060 Год назад +7

      @DarkDrai
      It also seemed to have raised sides, which prevents the hornets from managing to squirm out of the trap by going over the sides. Very smart.

  • @jasonhuang3062
    @jasonhuang3062 Год назад +349

    Watching giant hornets getting trapped is surprisingly therapeutic

    • @kathylovesmk
      @kathylovesmk Год назад +5

      I'm wishing there was a human being version!

    • @jesusalberto-it1kj
      @jesusalberto-it1kj Год назад

      @@kathylovesmk It exists, it's called socialist leftism. The idiots fall and can't get out. They ask for help and they only make more idiots fall into that trap. The good thing is that they all die of hunger afterwards.

    • @girlart9
      @girlart9 Год назад +4

      oh my gosh!! Me too. I hate these damned things. Good to help the honeybee anyway we can.

    • @brandonmunsen6035
      @brandonmunsen6035 Год назад +5

      Makes me sad. Theyre living beings and theyre dying terrible slow stressful deaths..

    • @jesusalberto-it1kj
      @jesusalberto-it1kj Год назад

      @@brandonmunsen6035 cool death die pests

  • @absolutetuber
    @absolutetuber Год назад +407

    It is kind of neat that they respond to the pheromones and show up to try and help a brother out.

    • @js290
      @js290 Год назад +30

      like issuing a self destruct command after commandeering a bunch of bots

    • @conniejohnson3029
      @conniejohnson3029 Год назад +20

      😁help a brother out.

    • @stereodan7180
      @stereodan7180 Год назад +55

      He didn't want to die alone, "You guys should die with me."

    • @MentalEdge
      @MentalEdge Год назад +20

      He has turned the power of "nakama" against them.

    • @lucasmcguire1554
      @lucasmcguire1554 Год назад +25

      Or it's so other animals know not to fuck with hornets. Like, kill one of them and a whole hive comes to sting you, so better to leave them alone.

  • @peter5.056
    @peter5.056 Месяц назад +1

    The fact that these hornets can cry for help but but can't warn others of danger, is their fatal flaw.

  • @eineeidechse6898
    @eineeidechse6898 Год назад +20

    7:51 "And this kids was the story of the hornets"

  • @raymondkim3740
    @raymondkim3740 Год назад +55

    Seeing this, it really makes sense why Fish and Wildlife services were so worried about these hornets coming to the US. They are HUGE and the sound they make are truly terrifying. Holy crap.

    • @JukedSoluble
      @JukedSoluble Год назад +18

      Right! Thankfully, the 4 hives in Washington state and British Columbia Canada were eradicated in 2022 and there have been no new sightings of them nearly a year later.

    • @creatorsfreedom6734
      @creatorsfreedom6734 Год назад

      Holy poo poo

  • @KittenBowl1
    @KittenBowl1 Год назад +380

    I’m Japanese living in Japan and have seen these killer hornets in the country side. We call this Sparrow Bees 🐝 as it’s a size of a sparrow when it’s flying. These are gigantic bees and as he said some people die from it every year. Extremely dangerous not only to honey bees but also to humans ourselves. I used to run for my life when I saw it around 5 meters far. Only way is take a shelter. But here they are just catching one to catch more so casually. Gosh they’re beyond brave. 😮

    • @isidzukuri
      @isidzukuri Год назад +16

      Better wary about those bright yellow hornets in Japan. They are really toxic and deadly, and pretty small size compared to this. And yes, better call specialist to take care of them. They kill humans even not allergic to their poison, just poison very potent. This huge one not very scary, if You not touch them - You will be fine. Also only get rid of them if they trying to nest in your or neighbors' house. They are very useful for pest control on crops!

    • @Thee-_-Outlier
      @Thee-_-Outlier Год назад

      They are not extremely dangerous. People are allergic to them, it's only dangerous to them. Peanuts are dangerous for people that are allergic, would you call peanuts a dangerous legume? Stop demonizing innocent wildlife.

    • @marfar06
      @marfar06 Год назад +5

      They are not bees but wasps

    • @KittenBowl1
      @KittenBowl1 Год назад +9

      @@marfar06 These are called bees in Japan and classified as bees. Hence the name “Sparrow Bees”. Not wasps. We have other wasps that are classified as wasps. These aren’t. It’s a family of bees. And Japanese bees and European bees are completely different species of bees, not even remotely similar. An arrival of European bees while back in Japan almost wiped out the native Japanese bees population. Now I know these sparrow bees have traveled with some cargos and European bees have no defense system to roast these sparrow bees or special bee hives that are normally too large for sparrow bees to enter into the colony of bee hives. Such is an irony.

    • @Thee-_-Outlier
      @Thee-_-Outlier Год назад +11

      @@marfar06 he didn't say they were bees, he said they have a slang or nickname called sparrow bees because they are as large as a sparrow. He prefaced that in his previous sentence by acknowledging they are "killer HORNETS".
      my advice is for you is to brush up on your reading comprehension before you go around correcting people

  • @jimjimgl3
    @jimjimgl3 8 месяцев назад +15

    The Japanese are so polite. "Next I disarm the hornet"....while stomping on the hornet!

  • @12kenbutsuri
    @12kenbutsuri Год назад +8

    The direct translation for "hangoroshi" is "half kill" and they politely transkated to "disarm" xD thats a good one.

  • @imeaniguess.6963
    @imeaniguess.6963 Год назад +27

    3:02 R.I.P. tiny spider. You were collateral damage.

  • @steveblankenship5474
    @steveblankenship5474 Год назад +97

    Nice work! I’m retired from doing commercial pest control and I’ve done pheromone traps many times for moths in food plants, they actually work quite well. Watch this I’m 1) glad I’m retired and 2) glad I never had to work in Japan.

  • @nohandle62
    @nohandle62 9 месяцев назад +11

    I'm very glad you've figured out a way to protect the bees.

  • @mako4203
    @mako4203 Год назад +50

    I love the part when he disarm the hornet :) 1:49
    This guy is just a pure genius

  • @DarkVoidIII
    @DarkVoidIII Год назад +297

    Be careful of the nearby ant colony investigating the bee hive. They may also find the scent of decaying giant hornets appetizing to them, and come to investigate whether they can carry off any of the remains of the giant hornets. While some may get stuck there's sure to be some food secured by a large enough ant colony. When they lay a scent trail to the stuck hornets, they may also decide to investigate the bee hive more closely. Ants aren't too particular about what insects they eat, if they can trap them with enough ants they will start swarming over them. So it's essential for you to be careful and watch whether the ants multiply in numbers, or the bee hive will have an additional pest problem to deal with.

    • @xorap
      @xorap Год назад +21

      id subscribe to watch the bee - ant war

    • @ArtzyZero
      @ArtzyZero Год назад +20

      You could also relocate the trap that attracted the ants, shifting their pheromone trail. Alternatively chalk does kill ants, so you could rub it on the sides of the hive to deter them. If there's not enough ants returning to the nest to spread the message of a new food source, they'll likely move on.

    • @LudiCrust.
      @LudiCrust. Год назад +10

      @@ArtzyZero same thing with hornets if you kill the scouts the rest of their hive will have no idea about the bees they found.

    • @--973--
      @--973-- Год назад +11

      The pillar of the hive must be surrounded by water to prevent access by ants (I am writing this from the north of the Amazon)

    • @ArtzyZero
      @ArtzyZero Год назад +5

      @@--973-- Some species of ants can swim though and it could also pose a risk to the bees, so it might not be the best option but I suppose the ants might decide it's not worth crossing a large pool of water regardless of whether they can swim or not.

  • @taylormarzano3677
    @taylormarzano3677 Год назад +89

    As a gardener, it brings great joy to see Bee Keepers taking care of bees. Thank You ❤

  • @Gisellenid
    @Gisellenid 8 месяцев назад +6

    This is sad and satisfying at the same time. My brain is in a conflict that she can't comprehend.😅

  • @shreddedguy679
    @shreddedguy679 Год назад +14

    1:01 that one honeybee flying in right in front of the hornet lmao balls of steel

  • @YEdwardP
    @YEdwardP Год назад +156

    Honestly, this is a super interesting and intelligent approach to dealing with giant hornets.
    It is especially useful where these giant hornets are an invasive species. By baiting the trap with hornet pheromones, you are sure that (almost) only the invasive hornets will be attracted and not local bees or even local hornets.

    • @shinobuoshino5066
      @shinobuoshino5066 Год назад +11

      The bees that fly into a trap with a dozen giant hornets are just doing everyone a favor by removing themselves from the gene pool as soon as possible.

    • @krafaxxii6685
      @krafaxxii6685 Год назад +9

      ​@@shinobuoshino5066erhm akshually 🤓 that's not how bees work. But like fr tho. Not how they work.

    • @IzzyKawaiichi
      @IzzyKawaiichi Год назад

      @@krafaxxii6685 Unless they're drones. In which case, yes, thanks for removing yourself from the gene pool and not knocking up any queens.

    • @krafaxxii6685
      @krafaxxii6685 Год назад

      @@IzzyKawaiichi honestly tho it's a hive mind so the workers that got trapped and the ones that weren't are still the same KEKW.

  • @KFCMmuc
    @KFCMmuc Год назад +10

    6:40 - the most important aspect of this video. Props to the guy for keeping the bigger picture in mind!

  • @robertoricci3393
    @robertoricci3393 6 месяцев назад +12

    This guy is so brave to catch a hornet without a protective suit.

  • @thundergaming5785
    @thundergaming5785 Год назад +22

    I love how they immediately try to sting the board and get their asses stuck to it 😂

  • @arenawoodworks
    @arenawoodworks Год назад +48

    Those hornets are clearly on another level. You see them really helping and move different.

    • @somnyad
      @somnyad Год назад +2

      Yes, they are extremely intelligent. When I lived in Japan, I remember thinking about that, how they are just really smart... But they are terrifying, too. I wonder if that's how other animals think of us. 🤔

    • @Destin5258
      @Destin5258 Год назад +2

      @@somnyad Lets be honest, other animals look at us like Super Hitlers unless they are our pets. And I can't really blame them for it. Nobody has genocided as many animals to extinction as humans.

    • @RIUUI007
      @RIUUI007 Год назад

      @@somnyad Extremely intelligent, and yet they land in the yellow glue where they see twenty comrades are already stuck. 🤔

  • @somaday2595
    @somaday2595 Год назад +160

    Thank you for this video and the accompanying explanation of why your technique works.
    One dry summer I was mowing the grass with a push mower and running the mower under a tree with branches just a few feet off the ground. All of a sudden a cluster of yellow jackets were stinging my ankle at one specific spot. Of course moved about 20 feet away as quickly as possible and wonder why I was being attached there. There was a large nest a couple of hundred feet away where a nest of them was located in the an area of the roof of a house. I resumed mowing and saw the wasps around the tree coming out of hole in the ground under the tree. Aha! This time I approached with caution and left the mower running while over the nest in the ground. They were not happy, and they looked like they were trying to sting the mower. The mower won. 15 years later I still had a small scar from their attack. Your explanation of the release of pheromone explains why the wasps were able to attack the one specific point on my ankle.
    In another episode, I spotted a bald face hornet hive on an overhanging porch after getting stung by a couple of them while mowing even though I had not disturbed their hive and was about 50 feet away. After seeing the yellow jackets stinging the mower years before I had realized something provoked them to attack one specific spot. (The pheromone that you mentioned.) So this time, with the bald faced hornets, I poked a 12 foot long pole coated with deltamethrin, (a pyrethroid insecticide that kills but not quickly), into the hornet hive. They were not happy. I pulled the pole back, and sure enough, the hornets stung the heck out of the tip of that pole but left me alone. When pulled dozens of feet away from the hive, the hornets still buzzed and attacked the tip. The hive was finally pushed down with the pole but it took awhile. Next time, I will jab the pole into the hive and then lay the tip of the pole on a sticky trap near the hive.
    Thanks again for your explanation and demonstration.

    • @emilnemyl448
      @emilnemyl448 Год назад +17

      Man, from what you have just said, mowing grass is just a way too dangerous business.

    • @davidanderson_surrey_bc
      @davidanderson_surrey_bc Год назад +5

      @@emilnemyl448 You should see his rates for trimming hedges.

    • @somaday2595
      @somaday2595 Год назад +4

      @@emilnemyl448 : ) Just another one of the joys of home ownership.

    • @somaday2595
      @somaday2595 Год назад +3

      One of my earliest memories as a kid of around 4 1/2 years old, neighborhood kids had gathered around a fence in back of a basketball goal watching what looked at a way over-sized pincushion a seamstress might have attached to her wrist. They were daring each other to pick up the "pincushion", and then they pointed to me and told me to pick it up. And so I did. They looked about the size of bumble bees. I had never experienced what these critters were and so was unafraid. Whoa! A ton of wasps went straight for my crew cut hair covered scalp and one arm.
      My mother applied some Adolph's meat tenderizer and soda (I think) to my wounds.
      For years I blamed bumble bees for that episode. But now I realize bumble bees are good guys and a hive is near a main entrance to my house. They welcome me when I come home but never bother me....and I do not mess with their hive. : )

    • @JohnnyWad309
      @JohnnyWad309 Год назад +2

      @@somaday2595 Had some ground hornets on the side of my house. I pumped propane into their nest and ignited it. No more hornets. Did it about 7 times to be sure.

  • @Gracklers
    @Gracklers 6 месяцев назад +2

    the eternal anger of hornets is captured beautifully here as they try to bite and sting the glue trap after they get caught.

  • @X_Dark-
    @X_Dark- Год назад +427

    Thank you for this, we have been having trouble in the past with oriental hornets in Malta and it was effecting local bee colonies and having a negative impact on everyone since we had no way to control the spread and this will hopefully help a lot of people in being safe and offering other ways to treat it.

    • @Kronos0999
      @Kronos0999 Год назад +6

      You're welcome.

    • @stanislavczebinski994
      @stanislavczebinski994 Год назад +11

      They slowly but surely spread here in central Europe, too.
      Good to see they can be dealt with if need be.

    • @dalel3608
      @dalel3608 Год назад +17

      And with them hitching a ride on the shipping containers across the Pacific Ocean we have had to keep an eye out for them too here in western USA & Canada. So far they haven't really propagated to far yet thanks to active hunting of any hives; but it is only a matter of time where that slips up.

    • @swimfan6292
      @swimfan6292 Год назад +2

      That's rude

    • @zerotodona1495
      @zerotodona1495 Год назад +3

      @@dalel3608they are in Washington so most likely in Canada too. Be careful

  • @samsimington5563
    @samsimington5563 10 месяцев назад +33

    Honestly wasps are like fighter pilots: if one's in trouble, it'll call teammates, which in this case, is other wasps, to help

    • @Aw_Tizzy
      @Aw_Tizzy 3 месяца назад

      These are hornets.
      Wasps are actually not that bad [exception of yellow jackets]
      If you leave a wasp alone, it’ll leave you alone.
      Like bees.
      Hornets do not

    • @samsimington5563
      @samsimington5563 3 месяца назад +2

      @@Aw_Tizzy I have yet to see that be true with wasps

    • @giacondaesposito
      @giacondaesposito 2 месяца назад

      ​@@Aw_Tizzyhornets are wasps!

  • @perry6114
    @perry6114 Год назад +27

    Shout out to that brave bee which went out to see if the hornet was still there at 0:54. Personally, I wouldn't have dared 😂

  • @pspauloplayz4295
    @pspauloplayz4295 7 месяцев назад +5

    It's a perfect mix between mortifying and brilliant

  • @saidonfax
    @saidonfax Год назад +440

    I'm happy that the person mentions how the hornets aren't just the bad guys and they have roles in nature as well. Only do what we must to protect ourselves and our beehives but don't just go out killing any hornets we see.

    • @nuip7936
      @nuip7936 Год назад +89

      except in any country other than japan. if you live in japan then the hornets are part of the natural ecosystem, but elsewhere they are invasive and must be eliminated.

    • @jiv32
      @jiv32 Год назад +30

      What's their role aside from being mini mecha murder machines?

    • @Mycrosss
      @Mycrosss Год назад +9

      ​@@nuip7936might be quite the opposite, other, normal wasps have an actual use (pest control), while these Japanese ones are a bit more dangerous

    • @nuip7936
      @nuip7936 Год назад

      @@Mycrosss ??? i am saying the japanese ones must be eliminated from foreign ecosystems (e.g. united states) because they are invasive

    • @cindersofcreation
      @cindersofcreation Год назад +27

      @@jiv32 They eat aphids, other pests, and actually do serve a minor role in pollination (not honey production, but still germinating nearby flowers by incident)

  • @weaselman24
    @weaselman24 Год назад +450

    As someone allergic to stings this guy deserves a medal.

    • @leeday2265
      @leeday2265 Год назад

      Everybody is allergic to these things' stings. It builds up a toxin in you that after 4 or so.....the more probability you'll die.

    • @Valkinsenn
      @Valkinsenn Год назад +13

      And he's sans any protective clothing, too. That takes guts.

    • @dunescapetube3470
      @dunescapetube3470 Год назад

      Those look lethal to non allergic people aswell... demons

    • @ahndeux
      @ahndeux Год назад

      @@Valkinsenn It takes guts to net a hornet and throw it into a glue trap? Its not like he is putting honey on his private parts and standing out in a honey bee field.

    • @Valkinsenn
      @Valkinsenn Год назад +1

      @@ahndeux Brave Wilderness let himself get stung by one of those big bastards. His day was almost immediately ruined.
      ruclips.net/video/i7VMcMJBjD4/видео.html

  • @TheJECNova
    @TheJECNova Год назад +68

    You can tell how angry those hornets are, by their repeated attempts to both bite and sting.

    • @mynamesjudge
      @mynamesjudge Год назад +2

      You would probably be angry if you were being killed as well.

    • @dingus6317
      @dingus6317 Год назад +7

      @@mynamesjudgeLive by the sword die by the sword. They tried invading the bees and ended up getting stung.

  • @Logical_Chronical
    @Logical_Chronical 4 месяца назад +5

    It’s amazing that they release pheromones to help each other even though they are pests.

  • @TheEncouragementKid
    @TheEncouragementKid Год назад +83

    i've seen these hornets in real life while visiting Nikko, Japan, and I thought it was some advanced remote controlled japanese toy because they are that big. it's insane. this guy has no fear

    • @TheEncouragementKid
      @TheEncouragementKid Год назад +5

      @@rdred8693 just go in winter or autumn if you're really scared they're out and about in spring and summer

  • @kilcar
    @kilcar Год назад +40

    Perhaps one of the most noble and ancient professions. It's is a delight to watch beekeepers!

  • @oogalook
    @oogalook Год назад +188

    Very good presentation style too! Thanks for just showing us what's going on and explaining it clearly and simply. Nice work filming and editing the video!

    • @scoper7897
      @scoper7897 Год назад

      ITS MADNESS ALL ABOUT!!! ANIMAL CRUELTY

  • @KarenClinton-v8i
    @KarenClinton-v8i 6 месяцев назад +3

    Thanks for sharing. Im a beekeper here in USA and we know the hornets are already here. I think your idea is a great deterrent, especially for our bees, since this is a new threat. Thanks again!!!!!!