News
As summer rolls on, the Spotted Lanternflies have returned in New Jersey. Although the panic around it has eased, it’s still ...
The black-and-white nymphs may be crawling all over your flower beds. You're skirting (or smashing) the red-and-black ...
6hon MSN
The spotted lanternfly has been found in Greenville and Seneca and Clemson describes it as a “significant threat.” ...
The invasive spotted lanternfly, originally from eastern Asia, is back for the summer across the DMV — and while they don’t ...
Spotted lanternflies lay eggs in masses. These masses look like light grayish-brown, mudlike or puttylike patches, typically about an inch long, and they are found on various surfaces. At any life ...
Within three months, a shipment of small branches arrived in California. The branches carried not only cottony cushion scale, ...
Months after being found in Georgia for the first time, spotted lanternflies have now spread to South Carolina, too.
Invasive spotted lanternfly is now in SC with its voracious appetite. Authorities say kill on sight.
Clemson University has confirmed South Carolina has its first invasive spotted lanternfly in Greenville, potentially ...
Academy of Natural Sciences entomologist Greg Cowper says spotted lanternflies are primed for a population explosion.
Spotted lanternflies can harm trees in a few ways. They steal nutrients by sucking down sap, much like a parasite, and they create holes in the plant through which pathogens can enter, Johnson said.
LYNCHBURG, Va. (WSET) — The dreaded Spotted Lanternflies have started their summer invasion across the Commonwealth. Scott ...
Spotted lanternflies look different during each phase of their life. Pictured here are an adult spotted lanternfly, left, and a red lanternfly nymph, right, seen on a tree in Pennsylvania in July ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results