
Greg Abbott to request a task force be mobilized to prepare Texas against the hornet's arrival. When the Northern giant hornet was reported in Washington in May 2020, the concern was enough to prompt Gov. Northern giant hornets are native to Japan and South Korea and have only been found in parts of British Columbia, Canada and the northwestern corner of Washington state. While state agencies want to encourage Texans to be vigilant in watching for the Northern giant hornet, also known as murder hornet, they also want to help provide guidance that will help narrow the focus.

The Northern giant hornet was recently renamed by the Entomology Society of America and added to the group's Common Names of Insects and Related Organisms List. It's a bird, it's a plane … it's a cicada killer But she also receives photos of native cicada killers, also known as ground hornets, submitted as suspected Northern giant hornets. "It would be a far leap for them to be in Texas." Keck said she is mostly receiving phone calls about sightings.

"Northern giant hornets are not in Texas, and from reports, agencies in Washington state have done a very good job of controlling their numbers and preventing their spread," she said. Keck and other AgriLife Extension entomologists said people are most likely mistaking cicada killers, which are large native Texas wasps, for Northern giant hornets. But these sightings of Northern giant hornets, which were formerly named the Asian giant hornet and commonly called "murder hornet," are nothing more than cases of mistaken identity, said Molly Keck, Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service integrated pest management specialist and entomologist, San Antonio.
