BRITAIN'S "biggest Asian Hornet nest" has been found hanging from a ceiling amid fears a new killer bug invasion is just days away.
The huge nest has been discovered in a Channel Islands home as experts issued warnings to the public the problem is spreading.
Britain's biggest Asian Hornet nest has been found in a Channel Islands homeCredit: SWNSA British invasion by the potentially-deadly bugs could be imminent, experts warnCredit: GettyIt was found in a derelict property in the St Brelades district of Jersey and measures about 15in, or 40cm.
The nest is the largest identified on the island this year.
Jersey's setting in the English Channel is said to help make it the "frontline" for Asian Hornets heading to the UK from Europe.
Man fined £165 after outraging the internet by dying puppy to look like PikachuAnd officials say this year is the likely to be worst on record for sightings of the potentially-deadly insect in Britain.
There are fears strong easterly winds will blow in even more of the hornets from Europe in days, after sightings last year in southern England.
The bugs have previously been labelled "murder hornets" for their destructive attacks on other hives.
They not only decapitate other hornets - being the largest of the species - but also bees and wasps, before using the victims' bodies to feed their own young.
And repeated stings can also prove fatal for humans, killing at least 50 people per year in Japan where the insects are most prevalent.
At least 10 people needed urgent medical treatment in Jersey last month after being attacked by the bugs.
Some 171 nests have been discovered so far this year in Britain - up from 100 this time last year, MailOnline reports.
Alastair Christie, Asian hornet co-ordinator for Jersey's government, suggested about 1,500 of the bugs were in the newly-found nest.
He described it as "the biggest we've dealt with so far this year" and a surprise in such a "beautifully-sheltered" abandoned home.
And Mr Christie urged people to be on the guard, especially gardeners cutting back hedges and branches.
Dog who 'always melts hearts' with his smile hopes to find a loving familyHe said: "Destruction of the nests is logistically challenging.
'They can be found up trees, on cliff faces, inside roof spaces, or within brambles.
"They are in such varied locations, and efficiency and safety have to be prioritised when removing the nests."
A killer hornet was last week seen decapitating and devouring a wasp in Kent - months after the first sighting in the county for four years.
The insects have also been seen this year in Plymouth in Devon.
The arrival and spread of the species in Europe has been traced to a freight ship docking in the south of France in 2004, in a box of pottery from China.
The first mainland UK sighting was in Gloucestershire in 2016.
A pest control expert has recently shared tips on ways to keep yourself safe from the hornets, who are said to produce seven times more venom than wasps.