Bee Bricks That Help Thousands of Solitary Bees Are Now a Requirement for New Buildings in Brighton
The south-coast city of Brighton and Hove, in England, is mandating that new buildings be included with special bricks for nesting bees.
A beekeeper was so devastated five years ago when all his bee hives were destroyed by Asian hornets, he vowed to figure out a solution to fight back.
French beekeeper Denis Jaffré thought about it night and day, and finally came up with a trap that stops the invasive species, which has no natural predators in Europe where they have been terrorizing hives since arriving accidentally in a cargo shipment from Southeast Asia.
The trap Jaffré invented does no harm to bees.
It attracts insects with a sugary bait using a funnel, but the larger hornets can't get out. Bees can easily escape through tiny holes.
Reuters reports that the beekeeper won an inventor's prize 3 years ago and is now manufacturing the traps using 3D printers and six employees, and is being flooded with orders.
He hopes that governments will get involved so Europe can stop the spread of the so called predatory species.
See the story below from Reuters… [CORRECTION: The Reuters article appearing in the Globe and Mail incorrectly identified the pests as ‘murder hornets' and ‘Asian giant hornets' which are a different species than is in France today.]
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