The WSDA scientists asked people to report giant hornet sightings. They plotted the sightings on a map, then drew circles around them based on how far the insects usually fly. That told them where to place traps to try to catch more hornets. Local beekeepers helped them set more than 2,500 traps that attract and kill the wasps.
Last September, WSDA scientist Chris Looney captured the first live hornet in a net. If his team could follow it, it would lead them right to its nest. The scientists tried gluing a tracking tag to the hornet, but that prevented it from flying. The next week, they used dental floss to tie a tag on another hornet, but it flew away so fast that they lost the signal from the tag.
In October, the team tried longer-range tracking tags. One hornet they tagged nearly got away. But then the scientists picked up a faint signal that led them to a large tree. They saw a hornet fly into a crevice in the trunk. They’d found the nest! “We were pumped,” says Looney.