Catch this insect in your home? Take it out right away!

Why Lanternflies Are a Problem

They call it a lanternfly, but it doesnโ€™t glow. Itย sucksโ€”literally.

This insect is from China. It arrived in the U.S., probably hitching a ride on a shipping container. First spotted in Pennsylvania in 2014, itโ€™s now spreading across the East Coast like an unwanted tourist who refuses to leave.

Sure, bugs are part of natureโ€”but this one ruinsย fruit trees, vines, and even backyards. Itโ€™s like a tiny agent of chaos.

What They Do to Plants

The lanternfly doesnโ€™t bite or chew. It pierces. With its long straw-like mouth, itย sucks sapย from trees. Then it secretesย honeydewโ€”a sticky, sweet substance that sounds harmless but isnโ€™t.

Honeydew attracts mold. Within weeks, leaves on my maple looked charred, like someone ran them through a barbecue.

How to Identify Them

Adults:ย About an inch long. Gray wings with black dots. Red underwings that flash when they fly. Sudden flight.

Nymphs (babies):ย Start black with white spots, later turn red and black. Small, but aggressive.

Eggs:ย Look like gray mud smears. Found on tree bark, bricks, or even lawn chairs.

Watching Them Feed

They move slowly while eating. Thatโ€™s the worst part. They latch on and stay put. Unlike bees or butterflies, they donโ€™t flutter aroundโ€”they justย suck sapย like stationary parasites.

One morning, coffee in hand, I watched one feed for five minutes. Motionless. It was like staring at a tapeworm in real life. If I hadnโ€™t squashed it, I might have cried.

Where Theyโ€™re Coming From

Origin: China. First U.S. sighting: Pennsylvania. Now?ย Everywhere east of Ohio.

Nobody seems to have a definitive solution. They thrive in warm weather, love trees, and lay eggs almost anywhereโ€”like Airbnb guests who never check out.

How to Handle Them

I hate this part. Iโ€™m usually a โ€œcatch and releaseโ€ kind of person. But with lanternflies, thereโ€™s no mercy.

  • Step on it immediately.

  • Use a flyswatter, shoe, or anything handy.

  • Missed? Try again. Theyโ€™re fast, but not invincible.

I once tried flicking one off a chair. It landed on my leg. I screamed, then stomped it with a gardening trowel. No pride. No regret.

Their Eggs Are Tiny Nightmares

Eggs appear as gray, dried mud-like smears. Could be on bark, bricks, or furniture.

Tip:ย Scrape them off. Donโ€™t drop them in soil. That spreads the problem. Instead, place eggs in a bag withย rubbing alcohol or hand sanitizer.

Side Note: Cutworms

While weโ€™re talking pestsโ€”cutworms still rule the garden nightmare league. They chew seedlings to the ground. Wrapping foil or cardboard around plant bases helps, but yes, itโ€™s tedious.

I Didnโ€™t Sign Up for This

I just wanted a healthy tree. Maybe a few tomatoes or peppers. I didnโ€™t plan to become a midnight insect assassin.

But with lanternflies? You donโ€™t get a choice. Donโ€™t wait. Donโ€™t hope someone else will handle it.ย Itโ€™s on you. Itโ€™s on us.


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