About Bees & Wasps in South Africa
South Africa is home to several bee and wasp species that regularly come into conflict with humans when they establish colonies in or near residential and commercial properties. The most commonly encountered are the Cape Honey Bee (Apis mellifera capensis) and the African Honey Bee (Apis mellifera scutellata) β which is the subspecies behind the so-called 'killer bee' reputation, being significantly more defensive than European honey bee varieties.
Honey bees are vital pollinators and are ecologically protected β in most South African provinces, honey bee colonies should be relocated rather than exterminated wherever possible. However, when a colony establishes in a wall cavity, ceiling, chimney, or tree directly adjacent to human activity, the risk of defensive swarming and mass stinging becomes real and serious.
Paper Wasps (Polistes spp.) and the Potter Wasp build smaller nests on eaves, window frames, and garden structures. The Banded Paper Wasp is aggressive when disturbed and can deliver multiple stings. The Yellow Jacket Wasp (Vespula germanica) β an introduced invasive species β has established in parts of the Western Cape and poses a significant stinging hazard.
πΏπ¦ South African Facts
- The African Honey Bee (Apis mellifera scutellata) is up to 10Γ more defensive than European bees and will pursue threats up to 500m.
- An estimated 40 South Africans die from bee and wasp sting anaphylaxis annually.
- The Cape Honey Bee is unique to the Western Cape and is protected by conservation regulations.
- Yellow Jacket Wasps β an invasive species from Europe β have established colonies in the Western Cape and are spreading.
- A mature honey bee colony in a wall cavity can contain 60,000β80,000 bees and produce up to 20kg of honey, which can liquefy walls if the colony dies and the comb melts.
Warning Signs of a Bees & Wasps Infestation
Spotting a bees & wasps infestation early can save you time and money. Watch for these tell-tale signs:
High bee or wasp traffic around a specific point β roof eave, wall gap, tree hollow, or chimney.
A visible nest β paper-like grey wasp nests on eaves; beeswax comb visible in an opening.
Buzzing or humming sounds inside a wall, ceiling, or cavity.
Bees or wasps repeatedly flying into the same gap or hole.
A swarm β a large mass of bees hanging from a tree branch, fence, or structure (temporary resting point during relocation).
Honey staining or melting wax seeping through walls or ceilings β indicating an established honey bee colony inside the structure.
Health & Property Risks
Anaphylactic shock from bee or wasp stings β potentially fatal within minutes without epinephrine treatment.
Mass stinging attacks β African Honey Bees can mobilise thousands of defensive bees simultaneously.
Structural damage β honey comb built in wall cavities and roof voids causes serious water and structural damage when the colony dies.
Secondary infestation β abandoned honey comb attracts ants, cockroaches, rodents, and wax moths.
Extreme danger to children, pets, elderly persons, and those with known sting allergies.
Our Bees & Wasps Treatment Approach
At Eco-Fumigation, we follow a proven, multi-step process to fully eliminate bees & wasps and prevent their return.
Inspection & Species Identification
We identify the species, locate the colony or nest, and assess the risk level and appropriate method β relocation vs removal β before proceeding.
Bee Swarm Collection (Relocation)
Swarms β bees temporarily clustered on a surface while seeking a new home β are collected alive by our trained beekeeper partners and relocated to a safe apiary. This is the preferred, eco-friendly approach.
Established Colony Removal
Colonies inside walls, ceilings, or structures are carefully removed. Where possible, this is done alive with a beekeeper. Where the colony is inaccessible or dangerously defensive, professional treatment is applied.
Wasp Nest Destruction
Wasp nests are treated with fast-acting professional insecticide at dusk (when wasps are inactive) and physically removed once the colony is eliminated.
Comb & Honey Removal
After elimination of the colony, all honeycomb is physically removed from the cavity to prevent structural damage, secondary infestation, and attracting a new swarm.
Entry Point Sealing
All access points used by the colony are sealed to prevent a new colony from re-establishing in the same location.
Prevention Tips β Keep Bees & Wasps Away
Our technicians don't just eliminate the current infestation β they help you prevent future ones with these proven tips: