Why Lanternflies Are a Problem
They call it a lanternfly, but it doesnโt glow. Itย sucksโliterally.
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, itโs now spreading across the East Coast like an unwanted tourist who refuses to leave.
Sure, bugs are part of natureโbut this one ruinsย fruit trees, vines, and even backyards. Itโs like a tiny agent of chaos.
What They Do to Plants
The lanternfly doesnโt bite or chew. It pierces. With its long straw-like mouth, itย sucks sapย from trees. Then it secretesย honeydewโa sticky, sweet substance that sounds harmless but isnโt.
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. Thatโs the worst part. They latch on and stay put. Unlike bees or butterflies, they donโt flutter aroundโthey 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 hadnโt squashed it, I might have cried.
Where Theyโre 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 anywhereโlike Airbnb guests who never check out.
How to Handle Them
I hate this part. Iโm usually a โcatch and releaseโ kind of person. But with lanternflies, thereโs no mercy.
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Step on it immediately.
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Use a flyswatter, shoe, or anything handy.
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Missed? Try again. Theyโre 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. Donโt drop them in soil. That spreads the problem. Instead, place eggs in a bag withย rubbing alcohol or hand sanitizer.
Side Note: Cutworms
While weโre talking pestsโcutworms still rule the garden nightmare league. They chew seedlings to the ground. Wrapping foil or cardboard around plant bases helps, but yes, itโs tedious.
I Didnโt Sign Up for This
I just wanted a healthy tree. Maybe a few tomatoes or peppers. I didnโt plan to become a midnight insect assassin.
But with lanternflies? You donโt get a choice. Donโt wait. Donโt hope someone else will handle it.ย Itโs on you. Itโs on us.

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