Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 10
Arizona Firefighters Rescue Man After Bee Swarm Leaves Him With Life-Threatening Injuries 20 Miles South of Tucson
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 10

Arizona Firefighters Rescue Man After Bee Swarm Leaves Him With Life-Threatening Injuries 20 Miles South of Tucson

1 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jun 10

Summary

  • Santa Rita firefighters last month pulled a man blanketed by stinging bees from a remote area near Sahuarita and flew him to a hospital with life-threatening injuries.
  • Protective suits, helmets and duct tape were needed to reach him, and medics said the bees remained aggressive even a football field away.
  • The attack was one of several May episodes in southern Arizona tied to Africanized honey bees, a hybrid known for rapid, highly defensive swarming.
  • Africanized bees entered the United States in the early 1990s and now dominate many feral bee populations across parts of Arizona, Texas, New Mexico and California.

Insights

As climate change pushes 'killer bees' north, which major US cities are unprepared for their arrival?
Beyond the danger, do these hyper-aggressive bees hold any surprising ecological benefits for our environment?
If you can't fight or hide, what is the single most critical action to survive a 'killer bee' swarm attack?