Bald-Faced Hornet
Dolichovespula maculata
For commercial properties, bald-faced hornet nests attached to building exteriors, signage, loading canopies, or tree canopy overhanging walkways and entrances represent a direct health and liability risk.
Nests are often in plain sight yet go unreported by staff who mistake them for paper wasp nests or old inactive structures. A colony of 400–700 workers defending a large nest can injure multiple people rapidly.
The species’ ability to spray venom toward perceived threats near the nest makes them particularly dangerous during exterior building maintenance, window cleaning, and landscaping operations.
Habitat
On commercial properties, nests are found on building fascia, under loading dock canopies, attached to chain-link fence posts, in ornamental shrubs near entrances, and in tree canopy overhanging car parks and walkways.
Any aerial attachment point that provides partial shelter is a candidate site. Regular perimeter inspections in late spring and early summer are the most effective way to identify nests while they are still small and lower-risk.
Active Areas
Windsor
Present throughout Windsor, particularly in areas with mature tree canopy in older residential neighbourhoods and city parks. Commercial properties along treed corridors see occasional nest establishment on building exteriors.
Tecumseh
Moderate prevalence in Tecumseh, with nests regularly found in tree canopy and ornamental shrubs in residential areas and along the waterfront green spaces.
LaSalle
Moderate activity in LaSalle's suburban areas with mature landscaping. Properties near Canard River and wooded corridors see higher nest density.
Amherstburg
Higher prevalence in Amherstburg due to the town's mature tree canopy, historic properties with established vegetation, and proximity to natural areas along the Detroit River and Lake Erie shoreline.
Lakeshore
Moderate prevalence in Lakeshore, with nests common in hedgerows, windbreaks, and woodlot edges on rural and semi-rural properties.
Essex
Moderate activity in the Essex area. Wooded farm properties and established residential tree canopy provide suitable nesting habitat.
Kingsville
Higher prevalence in Kingsville given the mix of mature residential tree canopy, vineyard properties with established shrubby vegetation, and proximity to Lake Erie shoreline natural areas.
Leamington
Moderate prevalence in Leamington. Nests are found in residential and commercial tree canopy as well as in hedgerows and windbreaks on agricultural properties.
Chatham-Kent
Moderate prevalence in wooded areas and suburban yards across Chatham-Kent. Nests constructed in trees and shrubs through summer.
St. Thomas
Moderate prevalence. Residential and green-space areas of St. Thomas experience regular nesting activity.
Seasonality
The commercial risk window mirrors the residential pattern: earliest detection opportunity is May–June when nests are small and easier to treat. Peak liability is August–September when colony size and aggression are at maximum.
Autumn nest removal (after frosts kill the colony) is recommended to discourage other wildlife from using the abandoned structure and to reduce the visual hazard for the following season.
Spring
Summer
Autumn
Winter
Appearance
In a commercial identification context, the white facial and abdominal markings on a predominantly black body distinguish the bald-faced hornet from the yellow-and-black yellowjacket.
Staff should be provided with photographic identification guides. The nest’s enclosed paper shell with a single entry point at the bottom, typically suspended above head height, is unmistakable and should be reported to pest management immediately without disturbance.
- Predominantly black body with distinctive ivory-white or pale markings on the face, front of thorax, and tip of abdomen (not yellow)
- Larger and more robust than yellowjackets
- Large enclosed oval or teardrop-shaped grey papery nest hung aerially from branches, eaves, or shrubs
- Single entry/exit hole at the bottom of the nest
- Highly aggressive defence of nest at considerable distance — will pursue threats
- Capable of spraying venom from the stinger tip toward the eyes of perceived threats
Behaviour
In commercial settings, bald-faced hornet behavioral risks are concentrated around maintenance and construction activities near the nest. Vibration from power tools, pressure washers, or vehicles triggers defensive responses.
Workers will aggressively pursue and sting multiple times. The venom-spraying behaviour is documented and poses a specific risk to eye safety during exterior operations.
Commercial pest managers should be notified of any suspected nest before scheduled exterior maintenance is performed.
Lifecycle
Egg
Egg production begins with a single founding queen in spring and accelerates as the first workers emerge and expand nest capacity.
The rate of egg-laying provides pest professionals with an index of colony growth stage when assessing the urgency of treatment.
Larva
Larval development drives adult worker foraging activity. In commercial environments adjacent to wooded areas, workers will actively hunt insects in the surrounding landscape.
The species is less attracted to refuse and food waste than yellowjackets, but workers near the nest remain highly defensive regardless of food availability.
Pupa
The pupal stage represents the worker pipeline. A nest with a high proportion of capped cells is approaching peak worker numbers, indicating that treatment should not be delayed in a commercial context where adjacent human activity is ongoing.
Adult
Adult worker population peaks in August at 400–700 individuals. Workers are the direct risk to commercial operations. In late September, new queens and males leave the colony, but the existing worker population remains defensive until cold kills them.
Commercial properties should maintain their alert status until the first hard frosts eliminate worker activity.
Signs You May Have a Problem
- Enclosed grey papery nest attached to building fascia, loading canopy, chain-link fencing, ornamental shrubs, or tree canopy overhanging walkways
- Large black-and-white wasps aggressively patrolling a fixed radius around an attachment point on the building exterior
- Staff or contractors reporting dive-bombing or stinging incidents concentrated in a specific area of the property
- Nest growing progressively larger week over week when observed from a safe distance
- Workers observed killing or dismembering other insects near the nest and in the surrounding landscape
- Presence of chewed grey papery material at an attachment point even before a full nest shell is visible
- Multiple wasps entering and exiting a single hole at the base of a large grey structure on the building exterior
Risks & Concerns
Bald-faced hornet nests near building entrances, outdoor work areas, or high-traffic walkways are a serious occupational health and safety liability. A mass-sting incident can result in emergency medical callouts, worker compensation claims, and business interruption.
The species’ defensive venom-spraying behaviour adds an eye safety dimension that must be addressed in the workplace hazard assessment for any exterior maintenance operations conducted near active nests.
Prevention
- Include bald-faced hornet nest identification in staff training for grounds maintenance, window cleaning, and exterior building maintenance crews
- Implement a monthly perimeter inspection programme from May through October to detect nests at the earliest stage
- Brief all exterior maintenance contractors to check for wasp nest activity before commencing work, particularly from July onward
- Establish a clear protocol for staff to report nest sightings to management without approaching or disturbing the structure
- Engage a licensed pest management professional with aerial work capability for nests at height on building exteriors
DIY Control
- DIY treatment of bald-faced hornet nests in commercial settings is strongly discouraged due to the colony size, the species' aggressive defensive response, and the proximity to employees and the public
- Staff should not approach, cover, or attempt to treat any suspected nest — document the location with a photo and contact a licensed pest management professional immediately
Professional Control
- Commercial treatment includes site risk assessment to identify all potentially affected work zones before treatment begins
- Insecticidal treatment is applied after business hours or during periods of minimal human activity around the nest
- For nests at height on building facades, licensed professionals use aerial work platforms or extension lance equipment
- Post-treatment documentation including location mapping, treatment records, and follow-up inspection reports are provided for health and safety files
- Emergency response callouts are available for active nest incidents near occupied commercial spaces