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Spot That Lanternfly

You don’t have to wait until fall to smash invasive spotted lanternflies. 

Photographed by Laney Eichelberger

We at Morgantown magazine love the outdoors and would usually tell you to respect all of its inhabitants. But right now, we—and scientists across the country—are telling you to eradicate one particular insect on sight: the spotted lanternfly.

You likely crossed paths with this unpopular insect dressed in polka dots last summer—or the red smears left on sidewalks after it had been stomped by upstanding citizens. It’s a planthopper that hails from parts of China and Vietnam and arrived in the United States in the early 2010s as a hitchhiker on international shipments to Pennsylvania. 





Since then, it’s made itself at home in 21 states and counting—including West Virginia—and cost the agricultural and forestry industries millions of dollars in damages. 

Talk about a troublesome guest.

That’s why scientists have been advising the following action for several years: If you see one, stomp it. But you don’t have to wait until spotted lanternflies reach maturity to eradicate them—in fact, the immature nymphs are all around us right now, dressed in white polka dots. And you can eliminate them before they reach adulthood, don black polka dots, and have the chance to reproduce. 





And there are a few ways to do it that don’t involve your shoes.

It’s easy to lay traps for spotted lanternflies that are climbing tree trunks, but you have to be careful not to interfere with other wildlife in the process. Carlos Quesada, an entomology specialist from West Virginia University Extension, recommends two types of traps described by PennState Extension:

Quesada recommends the following methods for destroying spotted lanternflies throughout the year.





Springtime and summertime
Summertime and fall
Fall and wintertime

Now get out there and spot, trap, and smash, those spotted lanternflies!

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