The Japan Times - In US, invasive spotted lanternflies are devastating crops

EUR -
AED 3.780953
AFN 77.233348
ALL 98.956186
AMD 404.916572
ANG 1.842769
AOA 941.392826
ARS 1084.344915
AUD 1.664155
AWG 1.854226
AZN 1.750147
BAM 1.950581
BBD 2.064476
BDT 124.696352
BGN 1.956118
BHD 0.388038
BIF 3026.601773
BMD 1.029411
BND 1.39766
BOB 7.081053
BRL 5.978921
BSD 1.022474
BTN 89.08763
BWP 14.368971
BYN 3.346247
BYR 20176.448222
BZD 2.053904
CAD 1.491132
CDF 2933.820805
CHF 0.939523
CLF 0.036772
CLP 1014.638127
CNY 7.403417
CNH 7.535909
COP 4284.839368
CRC 520.90622
CUC 1.029411
CUP 27.279382
CVE 109.970753
CZK 25.213326
DJF 182.082804
DKK 7.460478
DOP 63.539987
DZD 139.752254
EGP 51.831958
ERN 15.441159
ETB 130.795005
FJD 2.398084
FKP 0.847809
GBP 0.830304
GEL 2.923556
GGP 0.847809
GHS 15.618211
GIP 0.847809
GMD 74.633315
GNF 8837.354043
GTQ 7.91183
GYD 213.917624
HKD 8.019598
HNL 26.047558
HRK 7.596585
HTG 133.742148
HUF 408.389875
IDR 16855.260727
ILS 3.686412
IMP 0.847809
INR 89.684827
IQD 1339.416147
IRR 43338.187312
ISK 146.176321
JEP 0.847809
JMD 161.15879
JOD 0.730265
JPY 159.848429
KES 132.886464
KGS 90.021832
KHR 4111.997598
KMF 492.933548
KPW 926.469676
KRW 1506.37799
KWD 0.317748
KYD 0.85212
KZT 534.380168
LAK 22240.491497
LBP 91563.904025
LKR 306.300437
LRD 203.472607
LSL 19.335764
LTL 3.039582
LVL 0.62268
LYD 5.020567
MAD 10.321483
MDL 19.156743
MGA 4881.937483
MKD 61.614644
MMK 3343.48555
MNT 3497.937409
MOP 8.208337
MRU 40.848702
MUR 48.39281
MVR 15.852997
MWK 1773.055865
MXN 21.02949
MYR 4.59066
MZN 65.771987
NAD 19.335764
NGN 1526.451186
NIO 37.629316
NOK 11.751371
NPR 142.540607
NZD 1.841044
OMR 0.396315
PAB 1.022464
PEN 3.811202
PGK 4.103022
PHP 60.067136
PKR 285.27726
PLN 4.234494
PYG 8062.4275
QAR 3.728424
RON 4.97525
RSD 117.104708
RUB 102.684705
RWF 1445.332748
SAR 3.861178
SBD 8.724445
SCR 14.754421
SDG 618.675875
SEK 11.459569
SGD 1.401337
SHP 0.847809
SLE 23.577218
SLL 21586.225989
SOS 584.336501
SRD 36.1374
STD 21306.721536
SVC 8.947191
SYP 13384.396913
SZL 19.329468
THB 34.911944
TJS 11.145017
TMT 3.602937
TND 3.300668
TOP 2.410982
TRY 37.072829
TTD 6.932451
TWD 33.961798
TZS 2612.92103
UAH 42.763778
UGX 3760.936925
USD 1.029411
UYU 44.320766
UZS 13277.47369
VES 60.186713
VND 25972.030033
VUV 122.213696
WST 2.883201
XAF 654.206551
XAG 0.032711
XAU 0.000366
XCD 2.782033
XDR 0.784202
XOF 654.206551
XPF 119.331742
YER 256.118451
ZAR 19.343058
ZMK 9265.936786
ZMW 28.706191
ZWL 331.469801
  • NGG

    0.6100

    62.01

    +0.98%

  • BCC

    -1.0200

    125.14

    -0.82%

  • BTI

    0.1000

    39.74

    +0.25%

  • GSK

    -0.3700

    34.9

    -1.06%

  • AZN

    -0.9000

    69.86

    -1.29%

  • BP

    -0.1900

    30.87

    -0.62%

  • RBGPF

    0.2700

    66.27

    +0.41%

  • SCS

    -0.4100

    11.07

    -3.7%

  • CMSC

    -0.1200

    23.35

    -0.51%

  • RIO

    -0.5600

    59.85

    -0.94%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1400

    7.35

    -1.9%

  • JRI

    -0.0700

    12.46

    -0.56%

  • BCE

    0.2400

    24.03

    +1%

  • RELX

    -0.0400

    49.85

    -0.08%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    8.49

    -0.59%

  • CMSD

    -0.0900

    23.75

    -0.38%

In US, invasive spotted lanternflies are devastating crops
In US, invasive spotted lanternflies are devastating crops / Photo: Michael M. Santiago - GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP/File

In US, invasive spotted lanternflies are devastating crops

At first glance, the spotted lanternfly looks like an elegant butterfly, speckled with black spots on white wings with a splash of bright red.

Text size:

But the insect native to parts of Asia (Lycorma delicatula) is attacking plants and trees in the United States, and officials are moving quickly to try to contain its spread.

"The only good spotted lanternfly is a dead one," said Amy Korman, an entomologist at Penn State Extension, a part of the university that provides training and education in everything from farming to food safety to landscaping.

The insect was first detected in the United States in 2014, in Berks County, Pennsylvania. An egg mass was found in a shipment of stone from China, according to experts who have tracked its progress.

The SLF -- as experts call it -- poses no threat to humans or animals, but it has caused hundreds of millions of dollars in damage in the US agricultural sector, even though it has only been found in 14 states.

In 2020, a Penn State study indicated that in Pennsylvania alone, the insect was responsible for $554 million in annual losses, and the disappearance of nearly 5,000 jobs a year.

Despite huge efforts including quarantines, state officials could not contain the insect population.

"The spotted lanternfly is a very good hitchhiker," explained Korman. Despite its spectacular wings, the bug is not known to fly long distances.

"These insects are very sneaky. They spread thanks to us. We are taking them across the country, especially their eggs," the expert added.

Those clusters -- which look like clumpy smears of mud -- end up on tree bark, outdoor equipment such as lawn mowers or grills, and have even "survived some very harsh winters," Korman said.

Once the lanternfly reaches adulthood, it feeds on dozens of crops, ornamental and fruit trees, timber and plants. Once a number of insects feed from the same plant, it dies.

- Grape lover -

Spotted lanternflies have a particular affinity for grape vines. Scientists have observed dozens, even hundreds of them on a single vine.

Just ask Michael Fiore, who owns a winery and distillery in Maryland that was infested with SLFs last year.

"We have lost 1,000 vines," Fiore told AFP.

"The energy has been sucked out -- it's like a vampire," he explained, predicting he will lose half of his harvest this year, and rebuilding will take time.

"2022 was bad, 2023 is just as bad," he lamented.

Fiore is not alone -- winemakers across Pennsylvania and Maryland have suffered, between the loss of vines and lesser output from those that survived the infestation.

The insects also leave a buildup of sticky fluid (known as honeydew) on plants, which creates what the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) calls "sooty mold."

When that mold fully covers a plant's leaves, it prevents photosynthesis -- the process by which plants convert sunlight into chemical energy -- from taking place, and the plant dies.

Several US states have tasked scientists with finding a way to eradicate the SLF -- a true race against the clock, as entomologists predict the pest will reach the US West Coast -- and its storied vineyards -- by 2027-2030.

American orchards would also be affected, and Canada is worried too.

California's wine industry generates $170.5 billion in annual economic activity and employs 1.1 million people, according to the Wine Institute, an advocacy group.

In June, the USDA unveiled a five-year plan to study and combat the SLF phenomenon.

"We don't understand the full picture," said Matthew Travis, the USDA's point man on the crisis. "It's very challenging for us."

"There are so many things we don't know, especially in the population dynamics year after year and their uneven distribution," Travis noted, adding that experts have traveled to Asia to study the insect, but those visits were inconclusive.

"It's been a little difficult because they never saw the same big phenomena as we have here," he said.

Those obstacles have made it difficult to calculate the long-term financial consequences of the SLF's emergence in the United States.

On the grassroots level, residents have organized makeshift patrols to kill the bugs -- because they don't fly far, they are relatively easy to smash, but their relatively large size makes the task rather unappetizing.

In Westchester County, in the northern suburbs of New York City, sniffer dogs are being deployed to find SLF egg masses -- and giant vacuums are being used to suck up older specimens.

Some have gone so far as to poison the sap of the tree of heaven, one of the insect's favorite trees that also comes from Asia.

But the spotted lanternfly does not have a natural predator in North America.

M.Yamazaki--JT