Same! I spotted one in my backyard a few days ago here in central New Jersey. Also killed it too lol Edit: About a few minutes ago I reported to the New Jersey Department of Agriculture since Middlesex county isn't considered a quarantined county (yet).
I got yelled at on the boardwalk in Staten Island for stomping on one. “You just killed a living creature!” I tried to explain, but she just walked away. People were looking at me like I just clubbed a baby seal. Meanwhile, there are people fishing at the end of the pier, impaling sand worms with fish hooks, buckets of fish slowly suffocating, but I’m the bad guy. I’m guessing if she ever gets lice, she’ll keep them as pets and name them.
LMBO! You got to love the Island and the Karen's out there! Stomp away fellow islander! I'm a fellow islander and stomper too! Let's go get 'em 💪 😁🤣🤣🤣😎
You did the right thing, sometimes you must ignore the masses, due to their lack of knowledge. Thank you for doing that :) you must know you did the right thing!
I usually leave them be and admire there beauty. the only things I do kill are ticks and mosquitoes. nothing else! I actually even feed the ants in my yard and watch them
Hey you have more interesting insects than us in the uk like the luna moth, rosy maple moth, cicadas?? Lol i refuse to die till i see some of your insects
I’ve definitely done my duty this summer going for daily walks and squashing 100s per day. I even started carrying a fly swatter to help. I mix dish soap, salt, vinegar in a spray bottle and douse them.
Mizz peach ⭐ Do you stomp on the lanterflys flies more to make sure yur crush them good, Or do you twist yur feet from side to side on them more to make sure you crush them up? I ask cause there pretty hard to squish to me 😕.. lol
@@sticksstones4507 What if people put bottles with large holes on them, poked tiny holes in the cap so that they could breathe & sent them to back to their native country for free or, better yet, cash? As pets?
I have a spray mix myself that I take with me when I go up to the back part of my property, cos they're always just out of where I can reach...but I can still spray 'em! I'm also working very hard to kill off their favored tree of heaven, too, but that one's harder because there's a lot of mature trees in the neighborhood and I'm not equipped to handle those.
I’m in Bethlehem, PA and I’ve noticed some birds in my area have finally started eating them. Hopefully other birds see this and catch on. Additionally, city officials in Easton, PA started injecting trees with a poison that doesn’t harm the tree, just anything that drinks it’s sap. Hopefully other cities use the same strategy as it seems to be working. The only downside is hundreds (if not thousands) of dead SLFs are randomly scattered everywhere.
I agree. I know there are a few research projects happening at Penn State, where they are studying bird consumption of the SLF. They are testing a variety of things including the diet of the lanternfly (they believe that SLFs that fed on Tree-of-Heaven taste more bitter and are less palatable for birds that may have fed on other trees). Pretty interesting!
If you travel in an area that has a lot of them but your home area doesn’t be sure to check the outside of your car. They’re good at hanging onto the outside of a car and hitching a ride.
My new game is "Tens." I hunt them around my big silver maple with my fly swatter and can't stop until I get ten. Or multiples of 5. But I still call it Tens.
@@cucumber_999 thank you for sharing. There have been debates about whether or not this is true. It’s good to know she threw up and is okay. I’m hearing they can cause dogs to seizure and even stepping paws on them could cause blistering. I know the internet is full of “arm chair” experts so I wanted to dig a little deeper. Not that I would allow a dog to eat them but this gives me reason to believe it is indeed a toxin for dogs. Thank you!✌🏻❤️🐺
@@addamwoolf4796 the insect is not normally poisonous. however if it ate a toxic plant right before your dog ate it, that could cause a stomach ache or vomiting. but i don’t think it’s possible for it to cause blisters or seizures.
They also seem to land in water, frequently, and then drown… since they arrived in NJ, they are everywhere… but they are incredibly stupid for a flying insect. They fly into water, glass, and as you mentioned, have limited vision so it’s easy to simply grab them from the side or backside.
@@Andrew_the_Arborist What if people put bottles with large holes on them, poked tiny holes in the cap so that they could breathe & sent them to back to their native country for free or, better yet, cash? As pets?
Thanks for the informative video Andrew. All last year I was at my local golf course in Chester County PA playing golf pretty much from the end of spring until the weather got cold. During that time the flies overtook the property. You could find them crawling on every green, all you had to do was stomp them out, none of them really flew. It was quite disgusting to see.
I went there and they were squished all over especially at the Great Bear, but our first ride, the Trialblazer, i saw them flying everywhere and i was like oh great..we had a wonderful time today! I had my bf squish one for me 😊
I'm in NJ. I work in Princeton and live in Gloucester (60miles south). I saw one last year in Princeton and alerted the state, none near my home. This year in Spring while at work I saw thousands of nymphs on a Tree of Heaven at my work. Every branch had hundreds. Needless to say, this year Princeton is SWARMED with them. I routinely kill 20+ a day at work. At my home in Gloucester, where I saw none last year, I see maybe 3-10 a day. I check my trees and usually catch 2 to 3 and through out the day see a few more. Saw a couple in spider webs around the house also. I am the weirdo that gets out of his car in the drive thru to stomp on them when I see them lol As a gardener I try to spread awareness to others via my social media and hope other people are stomping!
I've got an electric bug zapper recently and that has been a satisfying process.im a nature lover, don't even hurt flies, but these things are DISGUSTING. I even have nightmares about them :( we have grapevines and I'm so sad I didn't realize what they were earlier this spring/summer. All you warriors, lanternfly assasins, STAY STROOOONG❤️ Catch em alll!
This was such an informative video. Thank you for posting. They have invaded our young Maples. My fly zapper works great for the kill. You know they’re dead when their wings pop out. I attach sticky tape and above wrap plastic around the trees and leave a space (so they can climb to their death). The ecosystem around them is fascinating. I watched a yellow jacket feast on another insect stuck to the tape. Also a few stink bugs sometimes there for the ride.
Can you explain to me how the climb to their death works? I’m 11 so I might not understand if you said how there,or if you even did,sorry I’m a year late.
My opinion. We had a million or more on a tree. Heres what I did three years ago. Heres my method 1. Back sprayer 2 fill it with water to the top 3 i put 8 ounces of dish detergent in the water 4. I put 8 ounces of vinegar in the water 5. I put 8 ounces of bleach 6. I put 8 ounces of ammonia in the water. In the spring when they started hatching I waited forca super windy day BLIWING into the woods were millions made a home. The mist had to get to many places. I also made this mixture in a spray bottle to keep in the car. You cant step on a of them BUT once this solution touches them IT KILLS THEM . I spray the woods in the early spring. I spray the woods again when I see even One Spotted Bug in our yard,woods,pool anyehere in our area. This summer I went from millions and millions to hundreds. Oh. When I spray them with a spray bottle I keep in the car I put the nozzle on stream NOT SPRAY. ALso they travel by walking. CUT YOUR GRASS AT NIGHT. i have lights on my Z turn. I could see 10000s on the grass that because food forthe lawn mower set at 2 inches. Ok. Ok. Ok. For some people you may think this is work !!!!! I had so many of these critters they touched one another. Noww I only see them here and there. IT WORKS FOR ME IT SHOULD WORK FOR YOU. Ronnie. Gotzongetzit manufactuing our of the Poconos of Pennsylvania
Pesticides can actually be extremely effective in controlling spotted lanterflies when used properly and in accordance with the label. Pesticides are especially helpful when trees or plants are experiencing fatal levels of stress due to mass spotted lanternfly infestations. There are two kinds of pesticides in regards to plant absorption characteristics. Systemic and non-systemic. When sprayed on the surface of a plant, systemic pesticides sit on the surface and simultaneously begin working their way into the plant, eventually reaching through the entire plant system. These pesticides can also be watered into the ground for the roots to drink up and deliver throughout the rest of the plant. This needs to be done early on large trees so the pesticide has time to spread before the lanterfly is ready to feed. This can take up to several months in a large tree. Systemic application effectively vaccinates the plant against pests such as leaf miners and also against sap-sucking insects like the spotted lanterfly. Even after the pesticide wears off the surface of the plant the inside is still protected for many months. When the lanterfly feeds from the plant it also feeds on the pesticide and dies. There is one major point of concern with this class of pesticides, however. If the plant flowers, and is actively flowering, the pesticide will also make it's way into the flowers and pollen and kill pollinators like bees. In this case it's best to use non-systemic pesticides and only apply them to the stem where bees rarely tend to land. This can offer protection without significant risk to beneficial insects. Pesticides are also very useful on structural surfaces that the lanterflies are landing on but beneficial insects rarely tend to land on in any significant numbers. If you are in the Philadelphia area and need help controlling spotted lanterflies and protecting your home and plant life, please feel free to reach out to us for supplies and assistance.
Well explained. I'm in Ontario and the media is reporting on potential spread between lakes Ontario and Erie, in the wine growing region. I think this would be a good time to promote Tree of Heaven eradication.
They will be there soon. They weren't in NYC when this video was made and now it's infested with them. So is long island. I'm sure they have already spread upstate so the next stop is Ontario.
I live in Philly and they're everywhere here. From one end of the city to the other. There was a news report recently of a swarm collecting in front of a Chipotle and dying off. There were so many, thousands, blocking the doors that the restaurant had to use a side entrance in the meantime. Can't escape them and anytime I see a lanternfly or group on the ground, I stomp on them. There's no other way to kill them here than with your feet if you're just walking around and randomly come across any on the ground. Unfortunately, most people don't walk around with shopvac's or chemicals on hand.
PA native. unfortunately not able to keep up the fight since I've left state for college, but this video needs to be seen by all my friends and family. Will definitely be best for when these suckers spread out further.
I'm from johnstown pa I never heard of these bugs until this summer I didn't see them around my house but lastweek when my son and I went to town witch is a five minute walk I saw them not very many they were all dead thankgoodness I don't have any trees around me town has alot of trees
Tree of Heaven. You solved a mystery for me. I do battle with it in my yard all the time bc it is so prolific. It’s a weed disguised as tree!! I amused myself by seeing that it is everywhere during an Amtrak trip across the country a few years ago. I was bored with nothing to do bc everything was closed for Covid so I took a train. In addition, it stinks & in the fall not only does it lose its leaves but also the most extreme part of its branches. It’s like a litter of chop sticks all over. No Lantern Flies here in Northern California yet.
> Discovers lanternflies all over my yard. > Gets rid of most of them by mowing the lawn > One snuck in the house, and i'm out of bug spray *Me:* .... I hope you like the smell of Axe body spray.
He so funny! I Love the jokes he makes! He makes his videos easy to follow, a lot of information & funny!😄 I am so so scared of these things Thank You for this very interesting learning video.
Andrew Conboy I hope you have read my comment on your last post. For, the information Found in your other post about them. For, the information you are posting is so important that it needs to go to a wider audience than that of RUclips.
I noticed gray catbirds are one of the species that does not care about the coloration. I see them chowing down on lantern flies outside my house regularly.
Wow, that's interesting! The populations in the Philly area have declined this year, and one of the theories is that more wildlife / predators are catching on.
At my camp, theres a stump and skinny tree that seems to be where spotted lanternfly family reunions take place; I've killed as many as 100 just from there. Further down in the camp, we have an archery field, and when there are strong winds blowing in the direction of the forest behind it, you can see so many spotted lanternflies seemingly appear from the clouds as they glide toward the trees. My friends and I have, in total, killed at least a thousand of them (we're in New Jersey) and each time we stomp on them, we scream, "Genocide!" We may be mentally unstable.
While I was outside for gym yesterday at school, there were 10 of them just wandering. We ran around killing them. Not only is it beneficial to the environment, but its a great work out too! (They have a satisfying crunch)
I got yelled at by a lady for killing one . She called me evil and I tried to explain to her what they do. She continued to yell at me .. finally I got so disgusted I told her to STFU!!!
i work at a pallet recycling company and these things are everywhere i stomped prolly around 30 today during my lunch break. i found that if u come at them from behind with a kick they get thrown off balance and cant reset their wings fast enough making them an easy stomp after. I will say i was impressed by their resilience i stomped on one then turned away to kill some other and when i turned back it had gotten back up and was starting to crawl away.
I wish our local news station would play this! everyone is bitching about them Now but we had warnings far in advance of this (current) mess. (I’m in NYC in case anyone’s curious; upstate NY had lots of info up about them so … thanks so much for this!!!!
I work in a garden center in Central PA, I stepped on one and an older gentlemen said, "Aw, poor guy :(" I told him it was a lanternfly, he walked over and twisted his heel into the dead bug lmao that guy knows
The Eastern Panhandle is overwhelmed with these things. Can't go outside without them lighting all over us, and our homes. And they are super quick. Harder to stomp than a fly.
@@Andrew_the_Arborist Thanks man :) I'm doing ok, just started my Grad Degree.. 3 days un now.. it's starting to get real XD I love to see your videos on environmental related topics! I often feel more impassioned about a subject when someone I appreciate is passionate about it too. Keep up the great work!
@@Thecastofthelast Wow, that's great! Good luck - you're gonna be great! I hope to keep making science / environmental videos, so hopefully I can help you out there! :)
Started seeing these around my apartment. My state is asking people to report them in counties that aren't in quarantine (mine isn't), so I've been reporting and trying to step on them. They're pretty quick. Cool looking bugs, but invasive and a pain.
Great video. Very informative. I wish they'd show this in schools. Little kids are curious and closest to the ground and they notice the smallest things.
I mixed 4 tablespoons Dawn dish soap, 2 cups apple cider vinegar, 1 cup water and various essential oils like lemongrass, eucalyptus and peppermint. Sneak up on them and spray with a spray bottle. After a few sprays thats it.
Haha I live in pa… moved to reading pa 2 years ago. Never seen them before at that time. I was so confused on what they were and why they were everywhere!!! Currently I see them all day all over the place.
excellent video,...enjoyed your commentary. We are in Pennsylvania, and they are BAD....we're near Hershey. I'm sorry to see this...(former Florida resident)
They seem to be able to see color. The Nimphs appear to be attracted to Black surfaces. In my West New York, NJ neighborhood the congregate on Black trash cans, black railings & even the black base of a waterfountain.
lol the phone you used to type this comment was made In China. Be made at America’s government for setting up deals to make all of our products made from slaves in China
Typical ignorant American. They come here from US shipments. But sure let's keep voting against the programs that prevent invasive species and lets keep voting against regulations for corporations.
This video was informative but it’s not helping my situation. We cut a small tree down next to our front door where they were…in the small black spider with white dots stage. So now they’re all over the hand rail, the drive way, the door rim. How do we get rid of them since they’re not on a tree anymore??
Omg sane. We cut down an infested Tree of Heaven in our backyard that helped some., but now they’re all over our driveway and surrounding our back door and around our front porch. I hate them I’m scared to go out my doors fearing they might make their way inside.
Nerf swords worked great! The kids and I have been hunting around pine trees. They jump before we can step on them but I bought 4 swords and they are AWESOME.
I live right on the water in New Jersey (I can see the NYC skyline after a 5 minute walk to my town's beach) and I found one in my bathroom yesterday after the window was left open. Felt pretty good to get rid of that thing lol
This video is great and very informative, I don't think this info was available at the time but the State of New Jersey now has a list of pesticides that are effective against the lanternfly.
Fantastic, so informative! Definitely gonna get on the site you mentioned to report them This is the first year I've seen them, I'm right outside of Philadelphia
Thanks for the helpful info. I live in Forks Township, PA and they are all over the place now. I tried to put tape with glue around the trees but was concerned about the birds and squirrels getting caught up on it. They like some trees more than others. I will try your suggestions. thank you!
I live in Maryland and man these things are all over! When you touch one, the force it has when it jumps is pretty impressive. I can't kill bugs, IDK what to do 😞😞💔💔
I was driving through Jessup, MD one day. One known fuel stop is that TA located in that town. I just happened to drive through there months ago and these giant insects were seen there during the day. I am not sure if they were spotted lantern butterflies. However, even after clearing the windshield, their families kept thudding the windshield when I left.
@@Joe_334 Spotted Lanternflies are not the same as butterflies. They are an invasive planthopper that devour crops & trees. Butterflies, on the other hand, pollinate plants and are good for ecosystems. Also yikes, hope you didn't run out of wiper fluid!
was outside on break at work and getting some sun when I saw what I thought was an injured moth. almost smacked me in in face when it became airborne...following morning SPOTTED LANTERNFLY makes the news. .🤦♀️
Even since I seen my first one I thought it was a weevil of some sort then found out what it really was and now I kil everyone I see I even killed the one attacking my sunflowers but stomping them can be a bit difficult as they are quite fast reaction time wise and it seems the older they get in their life cycle the slower they react as the little babies (black and white) respond and move faster than the adult which is interesting
First time I saw one was when I went to see the Great Wall of China, I didn't know what it was so I left it alone. When i came back around a few hours later, someone stomped on it. I thought it was sad but I get it now why they did it.
It’s taken me 2 weeks to get rid of them on my fig tree. I felt terrible killing them by my local Department of Environmental Control told me Lanterflies are becoming too invasive and now the Dept. of Agriculture has them under their watch. I knocking them off the tree to the ground to stomp them, but ended up with the glue tape. Once they become full grown they are much easier to catch. I’m hoping not much damage to my fig tree.
I went running, avoided five but swear one was running me down, I ran to right then left but it was determined to land on me, I eventually burst out laughing....... I'm over them, I hate bugs 😤😅.
The praying mantis is the natural enemy. They've been becoming more abundant this year, I've seen more than I have in the past. I'm thinking about looking into raising some mantis' and letting them into the wild.
I use an insecticidal soap mixed with white vinegar. The acid salts and vinegar acid breaks through their shell. I have killed more than 200 nymphs in the last month. Put the bottle on stream, get up close and hose them. The mixture does not harm plants.
@@Ki-lk5wn they can only jump forward. If you face them they will fly into you. I spray the wings which limits their distance. Once they are grounded I stomp them.
I remember when I was baking cookies with my youngest brother Jeremiah and my two other little brothers Zach and Jed were watching us. Just then, we saw a spotted lanternfly sitting on the deck. I said, "I think that's a lanternfly." And Jeremiah said, "yeah. It is." And Jed said, "it's so beautiful, but it needs to die." So Zach grabbed a fire extinguisher 🧯, went outside, and smashed it to death.
The Tree of Heaven (Ailanthus) is also known as the stink tree because of the smell it has once you break off the leaves. And they are all over the place in the NE and the Midwest.
I’m scared of them and I definitely don’t want to step on them! Ewww! They are all over my front porch…I don’t have trees near me. Is there something that I can spray my porch and porch furniture with that would keep them away?!!!!
What if people put bottles with large holes on them, poked tiny holes in the cap so that they could breathe & sent them to back to their native country for free or, better yet, cash? As pets?
3 tsp Neem oil and 3 tsp dish soap in a spray bottle and it's like you at the arcade in Coney Island! You squirt one and in a second it pops like popcorn! Neem is also used for organic farming so you don't need to worry about poisoning yourself. Nice video gonna subscribe.
I just went to New York for vacation, and saw these things everywhere. I didn't know what they were until my dad dramatically stomped on it and told me they're invasive and we have to kill them. Needless to say, I probably killed thousands just stomping everywhere and I feel like a hero.
I failed getting one of there earlier today. Failed miserably. I learned a lot though so im now armed with knowledge and hope th have a better kill rate. I'm in Jersey City, NJ btw. Just starting seeing them and also check my car before leaving to avoid hitchhiking. I killed one in my car door jam before leaving for work.
I'm in New Jersey. I stomped one out today. I feel like a hero. 🦸♂️
Good work!! 🙌
I just learned about this not too long ago. I finally have the ability to order 66 them now...
I work in Mt laurel NJ at Costco and we get tons of these . Funny thing is that they seem to like the light posts in parking lots
Keep stomping !
Same! I spotted one in my backyard a few days ago here in central New Jersey. Also killed it too lol
Edit: About a few minutes ago I reported to the New Jersey Department of Agriculture since Middlesex county isn't considered a quarantined county (yet).
I got yelled at on the boardwalk in Staten Island for stomping on one. “You just killed a living creature!” I tried to explain, but she just walked away. People were looking at me like I just clubbed a baby seal. Meanwhile, there are people fishing at the end of the pier, impaling sand worms with fish hooks, buckets of fish slowly suffocating, but I’m the bad guy. I’m guessing if she ever gets lice, she’ll keep them as pets and name them.
Lol and she probably eats meat (I eat meat too) so killing cows and pigs is ok for her but not a pest
LMBO! You got to love the Island and the Karen's out there! Stomp away fellow islander! I'm a fellow islander and stomper too! Let's go get 'em 💪 😁🤣🤣🤣😎
You did the right thing, sometimes you must ignore the masses, due to their lack of knowledge. Thank you for doing that :) you must know you did the right thing!
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🧑🦲🧑🦲🧑🦲🌴🌳🌳🌳🌲🌲🌳🌱🌱🙉🦗🦗🪲🦗🪰🪰🪰🪰🪰🐞🐞🐞🐞🐞🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋
You too?? I just tell em “and imma do it again.”
I got so excited the other day thinking "Oh wow! We finally have some cool looking moths!"
Boy was I wrong.
SAAAAME
I usually leave them be and admire there beauty. the only things I do kill are ticks and mosquitoes. nothing else! I actually even feed the ants in my yard and watch them
Hey you have more interesting insects than us in the uk like the luna moth, rosy maple moth, cicadas?? Lol i refuse to die till i see some of your insects
@@georgieippolito9924 you would even let flies and roaches live?
@@Jamal-eh6pw yup if they don't try to bite they live. flies and roaches would be captured and let outside if I ever find one in the house.
I read planting milkweed is helpful as it's poisonous to them. It's also great for monarch butterflies...win win!
They actually eat milkweed?? I guess that’s an example of them not evolving with the milkweed and not knowing that it’s toxic!
I’ve definitely done my duty this summer going for daily walks and squashing 100s per day. I even started carrying a fly swatter to help. I mix dish soap, salt, vinegar in a spray bottle and douse them.
Thanks for your service 👍
Mizz peach ⭐ Do you stomp on the lanterflys flies more to make sure yur crush them good, Or do you twist yur feet from side to side on them more to make sure you crush them up? I ask cause there pretty hard to squish to me 😕.. lol
@@sticksstones4507 What if people put bottles with large holes on them, poked tiny holes in the cap so that they could breathe & sent them to back to their native country for free or, better yet, cash? As pets?
@@gameypiettvgamergames7463 lets try that with you first and see how long u survive
I have a spray mix myself that I take with me when I go up to the back part of my property, cos they're always just out of where I can reach...but I can still spray 'em!
I'm also working very hard to kill off their favored tree of heaven, too, but that one's harder because there's a lot of mature trees in the neighborhood and I'm not equipped to handle those.
I’m in Bethlehem, PA and I’ve noticed some birds in my area have finally started eating them. Hopefully other birds see this and catch on. Additionally, city officials in Easton, PA started injecting trees with a poison that doesn’t harm the tree, just anything that drinks it’s sap. Hopefully other cities use the same strategy as it seems to be working. The only downside is hundreds (if not thousands) of dead SLFs are randomly scattered everywhere.
I agree. I know there are a few research projects happening at Penn State, where they are studying bird consumption of the SLF. They are testing a variety of things including the diet of the lanternfly (they believe that SLFs that fed on Tree-of-Heaven taste more bitter and are less palatable for birds that may have fed on other trees). Pretty interesting!
I’ve also seen a bunch of those yellow tape on trees which catch quite of bit
@@Andrew_the_Arborist Yellow jackets are eating them to
I saw a young one in Bethlehem last Friday. I bent down to look at it and it jumped up onto my face. I died.
I used to live in Bethlehem. Right outside of Easton.
If you travel in an area that has a lot of them but your home area doesn’t be sure to check the outside of your car. They’re good at hanging onto the outside of a car and hitching a ride.
Yep
I was babysitting the other day, and a little boy taught me to hit them with a wooden baseball bat. Hands down my new favorite game.
That reminded me of the spider scene from Jumanji.
My new game is "Tens." I hunt them around my big silver maple with my fly swatter and can't stop until I get ten. Or multiples of 5. But I still call it Tens.
Lol. That reminds me of when I was a kid and we used to hit lightning bugs out of the air with a wiffle ball bat.
How many of them have you step on melissa
A bug assalt gun is fun as well!
I would kill 20-30 a day in Philly every day this year. We have lost control.
Bruh it's crazy down here lol body's everywhere
I’m in central Jersey and I have never seen these before until yesterday. Found one dead yesterday and just a few minutes my dog ate one…
SAME OMG
Is your dog okay? I recently saw a comment that they are poisonous to dogs?
@@addamwoolf4796 she ate TWO others that day and she threw up later on so I assume they are poisonous.
She is all okay now though :)
@@cucumber_999 thank you for sharing. There have been debates about whether or not this is true. It’s good to know she threw up and is okay. I’m hearing they can cause dogs to seizure and even stepping paws on them could cause blistering. I know the internet is full of “arm chair” experts so I wanted to dig a little deeper. Not that I would allow a dog to eat them but this gives me reason to believe it is indeed a toxin for dogs. Thank you!✌🏻❤️🐺
@@addamwoolf4796 the insect is not normally poisonous. however if it ate a toxic plant right before your dog ate it, that could cause a stomach ache or vomiting. but i don’t think it’s possible for it to cause blisters or seizures.
They also seem to land in water, frequently, and then drown… since they arrived in NJ, they are everywhere… but they are incredibly stupid for a flying insect. They fly into water, glass, and as you mentioned, have limited vision so it’s easy to simply grab them from the side or backside.
This video has renewed my purpose in life. I will now exterminate lanternflies lol
Hahaha go for it!
I kill them too but I feel like a jerk each and everytime. 🤦♂️
well if you can't be a constructive person in life ^^;
"Every single Lanternfly is now an enemy of the Republic."
- Emperor Palpatine
@@Andrew_the_Arborist What if people put bottles with large holes on them, poked tiny holes in the cap so that they could breathe & sent them to back to their native country for free or, better yet, cash? As pets?
The way they walk/hop seriously cracks me up
I just salute the one spider in my yard that traps a bunch of them at a time! 😅
Salut
Oh shii i ment salute
@@spoopy9879 you just said health in some language
@@rougeredsun5845 oh i said salute in german nazi germany
@@spoopy9879 yea
Thanks for the informative video Andrew.
All last year I was at my local golf course in Chester County PA playing golf pretty much from the end of spring until the weather got cold. During that time the flies overtook the property. You could find them crawling on every green, all you had to do was stomp them out, none of them really flew. It was quite disgusting to see.
I was at Hershey park recently, and the ground was littered with the corpses oh these bad boys
Oh jeez I'm going there next week, welp I'll have a fun game to play in the lines XD
@@SkittyDangerzne I was just there last weekend - they are really everywhere so have fine squishing some!
I didn't know when I was there, im not a bug squisher but had I known I could have stepped on a ton, now I feel bad
I went there and they were squished all over especially at the Great Bear, but our first ride, the Trialblazer, i saw them flying everywhere and i was like oh great..we had a wonderful time today! I had my bf squish one for me 😊
@@SkittyDangerzne lol I was wondering if there was gonna be an update
These are starting to get on stinkbug levels of nerves for me 😂
I'm in NJ. I work in Princeton and live in Gloucester (60miles south). I saw one last year in Princeton and alerted the state, none near my home. This year in Spring while at work I saw thousands of nymphs on a Tree of Heaven at my work. Every branch had hundreds. Needless to say, this year Princeton is SWARMED with them. I routinely kill 20+ a day at work. At my home in Gloucester, where I saw none last year, I see maybe 3-10 a day. I check my trees and usually catch 2 to 3 and through out the day see a few more. Saw a couple in spider webs around the house also. I am the weirdo that gets out of his car in the drive thru to stomp on them when I see them lol As a gardener I try to spread awareness to others via my social media and hope other people are stomping!
I've got an electric bug zapper recently and that has been a satisfying process.im a nature lover, don't even hurt flies, but these things are DISGUSTING. I even have nightmares about them :( we have grapevines and I'm so sad I didn't realize what they were earlier this spring/summer. All you warriors, lanternfly assasins, STAY STROOOONG❤️ Catch em alll!
Great video man, this was really informative, saw a bunch of these things when I went hiking at the Delaware water gap last week
Kooltrex thanks a lot, I appreciate it! That is such a cool place to hike!
@@Andrew_the_Arborist yeah man it was really nice, hope to go back in the fall, keep up the good work
Wonderfully informative. Thanks from SE PA.
sadeyedlady1 thanks so much! Glad it was useful
@@Andrew_the_Arborist In fact, I just got back from a run and used the step on from the front and it worked like a charm. Keep up the good work!
I've been stomping on the lantern flies wrong... no wonder they keep flying away haha. Awesome video!
Thanks Vo! I hope you're doing well man :)
I've been spraying them with equal parts water and dawn soap. Works great and doesn't harm my plants. Plus a fly swatter. What a nuisance!
This works great if you have infested trees too!
When you say plants, do you mean fruits and veggies?
@@YevgeniyShcherbakov No...non edibles.
I haven't found the Dawn brew effective.
mix salt and 30% concentrate vinegar too and it’ll really hurt em
This was such an informative video. Thank you for posting. They have invaded our young Maples. My fly zapper works great for the kill. You know they’re dead when their wings pop out. I attach sticky tape and above wrap plastic around the trees and leave a space (so they can climb to their death). The ecosystem around them is fascinating. I watched a yellow jacket feast on another insect stuck to the tape. Also a few stink bugs sometimes there for the ride.
Thanks so much!
Can you explain to me how the climb to their death works? I’m 11 so I might not understand if you said how there,or if you even did,sorry I’m a year late.
My opinion. We had a million or more on a tree. Heres what I did three years ago.
Heres my method
1. Back sprayer
2 fill it with water to the top
3 i put 8 ounces of dish detergent in the water
4. I put 8 ounces of vinegar in the water
5. I put 8 ounces of bleach
6. I put 8 ounces of ammonia in the water.
In the spring when they started hatching I waited forca super windy day BLIWING into the woods were millions made a home.
The mist had to get to many places. I also made this mixture in a spray bottle to keep in the car. You cant step on a of them BUT once this solution touches them IT KILLS THEM . I spray the woods in the early spring. I spray the woods again when I see even One Spotted Bug in our yard,woods,pool anyehere in our area. This summer I went from millions and millions to hundreds. Oh. When I spray them with a spray bottle I keep in the car I put the nozzle on stream NOT SPRAY. ALso they travel by walking. CUT YOUR GRASS AT NIGHT. i have lights on my Z turn. I could see 10000s on the grass that because food forthe lawn mower set at 2 inches. Ok. Ok. Ok. For some people you may think this is work !!!!! I had so many of these critters they touched one another. Noww I only see them here and there. IT WORKS FOR ME IT SHOULD WORK FOR YOU. Ronnie. Gotzongetzit manufactuing our of the Poconos of Pennsylvania
I got a spray bottle with , 1 cup vinegar and 2 TBS soap rest of water and find the most effective . I tried neem oil didn’t work.
Pesticides can actually be extremely effective in controlling spotted lanterflies when used properly and in accordance with the label. Pesticides are especially helpful when trees or plants are experiencing fatal levels of stress due to mass spotted lanternfly infestations.
There are two kinds of pesticides in regards to plant absorption characteristics. Systemic and non-systemic. When sprayed on the surface of a plant, systemic pesticides sit on the surface and simultaneously begin working their way into the plant, eventually reaching through the entire plant system. These pesticides can also be watered into the ground for the roots to drink up and deliver throughout the rest of the plant. This needs to be done early on large trees so the pesticide has time to spread before the lanterfly is ready to feed. This can take up to several months in a large tree.
Systemic application effectively vaccinates the plant against pests such as leaf miners and also against sap-sucking insects like the spotted lanterfly. Even after the pesticide wears off the surface of the plant the inside is still protected for many months. When the lanterfly feeds from the plant it also feeds on the pesticide and dies. There is one major point of concern with this class of pesticides, however. If the plant flowers, and is actively flowering, the pesticide will also make it's way into the flowers and pollen and kill pollinators like bees. In this case it's best to use non-systemic pesticides and only apply them to the stem where bees rarely tend to land. This can offer protection without significant risk to beneficial insects.
Pesticides are also very useful on structural surfaces that the lanterflies are landing on but beneficial insects rarely tend to land on in any significant numbers.
If you are in the Philadelphia area and need help controlling spotted lanterflies and protecting your home and plant life, please feel free to reach out to us for supplies and assistance.
Thanks for your very informative comment!
Well explained.
I'm in Ontario and the media is reporting on potential spread between lakes Ontario and Erie, in the wine growing region.
I think this would be a good time to promote Tree of Heaven eradication.
They will be there soon. They weren't in NYC when this video was made and now it's infested with them. So is long island. I'm sure they have already spread upstate so the next stop is Ontario.
I live in Philly and they're everywhere here. From one end of the city to the other. There was a news report recently of a swarm collecting in front of a Chipotle and dying off. There were so many, thousands, blocking the doors that the restaurant had to use a side entrance in the meantime. Can't escape them and anytime I see a lanternfly or group on the ground, I stomp on them. There's no other way to kill them here than with your feet if you're just walking around and randomly come across any on the ground. Unfortunately, most people don't walk around with shopvac's or chemicals on hand.
I heard about that chipotle! They tried everything from vacuuming them to spraying them, and they just kept coming back. Crazy!
PA native. unfortunately not able to keep up the fight since I've left state for college, but this video needs to be seen by all my friends and family. Will definitely be best for when these suckers spread out further.
I needed this! They are everywhere!
ruclips.net/video/yjOKIOOw1ZA/видео.html
Effective trap. 😊💖😊
Timely! I’m sending this link to my relatives in Pennsylvania.
ruclips.net/video/yjOKIOOw1ZA/видео.html
Effective trap. 😊💖😊
Last time I saw them, was in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania near a crowded Amazon building.
@@Joe_334 Imagine that!
I'm from johnstown pa I never heard of these bugs until this summer I didn't see them around my house but lastweek when my son and I went to town witch is a five minute walk I saw them not very many they were all dead thankgoodness I don't have any trees around me town has alot of trees
Tree of Heaven. You solved a mystery for me. I do battle with it in my yard all the time bc it is so prolific. It’s a weed disguised as tree!! I amused myself by seeing that it is everywhere during an Amtrak trip across the country a few years ago. I was bored with nothing to do bc everything was closed for Covid so I took a train. In addition, it stinks & in the fall not only does it lose its leaves but also the most extreme part of its branches. It’s like a litter of chop sticks all over. No Lantern Flies here in Northern California yet.
They just got to Cleveland
More like Tree of Hell
> Discovers lanternflies all over my yard.
> Gets rid of most of them by mowing the lawn
> One snuck in the house, and i'm out of bug spray
*Me:* .... I hope you like the smell of Axe body spray.
Nobody likes the smell of Axe and if it kills a bug, what’s it doing to you?
He so funny! I Love the jokes he makes! He makes his videos easy to follow, a lot of information & funny!😄 I am so so scared of these things
Thank You for this very interesting learning video.
Kendra Jones thank you, Kendra!
@@Andrew_the_Arborist 💋
@@kendraj8139 " How many lanterflys have you step on by count ?
@@sticksstones4507 None! I'm too scared of them!😬 I either spray them with vinegar or throw something at them.
@@kendraj8139 ⭐ lol I don't blame you 😂 name the one bug u step on the most then ❓
I absolutely LOATHE these things!!!
Same. And now they're on my house and I'm losing my mind.
Andrew Conboy I hope you have read my comment on your last post. For, the information Found in your other post about them. For, the information you are posting is so important that it needs to go to a wider audience than that of RUclips.
I noticed gray catbirds are one of the species that does not care about the coloration. I see them chowing down on lantern flies outside my house regularly.
Wow, that's interesting! The populations in the Philly area have declined this year, and one of the theories is that more wildlife / predators are catching on.
At my camp, theres a stump and skinny tree that seems to be where spotted lanternfly family reunions take place; I've killed as many as 100 just from there. Further down in the camp, we have an archery field, and when there are strong winds blowing in the direction of the forest behind it, you can see so many spotted lanternflies seemingly appear from the clouds as they glide toward the trees. My friends and I have, in total, killed at least a thousand of them (we're in New Jersey) and each time we stomp on them, we scream, "Genocide!"
We may be mentally unstable.
o7 😂
While I was outside for gym yesterday at school, there were 10 of them just wandering. We ran around killing them. Not only is it beneficial to the environment, but its a great work out too! (They have a satisfying crunch)
They look really neat to me. I enjoy looking at them, and it makes me sad that they need to be killed, but I do understand.
@@woodlanddove they’re creepy
@@Hunter09231 damn idgaf
@@woodlanddove Bruh it’s a bug get over yourself😭😭
Thank you for this, the tree in front of my house is covered and i live in the city.
These bugs have really made the Marmorated stink bugs irrelevant. I see them and think "I wish that was our only problem"
I got yelled at by a lady for killing one . She called me evil and I tried to explain to her what they do. She continued to yell at me .. finally I got so disgusted I told her to STFU!!!
You said the right thing man! She sounds like a rude Karen so don't listen to her!
They break apart so easy when you swat them. Its fun to watch them FLY apart.
i work at a pallet recycling company and these things are everywhere i stomped prolly around 30 today during my lunch break. i found that if u come at them from behind with a kick they get thrown off balance and cant reset their wings fast enough making them an easy stomp after. I will say i was impressed by their resilience i stomped on one then turned away to kill some other and when i turned back it had gotten back up and was starting to crawl away.
I spray them and they jump at you. I hate them.
I wish our local news station would play this! everyone is bitching about them Now but we had warnings far in advance of this (current) mess. (I’m in NYC in case anyone’s curious; upstate NY had lots of info up about them so … thanks so much for this!!!!
I gave up on all this and now use a propane torch! Very satisfying.
I work in a garden center in Central PA, I stepped on one and an older gentlemen said, "Aw, poor guy :(" I told him it was a lanternfly, he walked over and twisted his heel into the dead bug lmao that guy knows
Also found that pool skimmers to cover before stomp make it almost too easy.
I haven't killed anything on purpose in years. Welp, time to break that streak.
I found that ortho bugclear works on all stages of lantern flies. It doesn't kill on contact but it does give them a slow death
I am known as the Lanternfly assassin in Wilmington Delaware, good luck in your fight!! This is still an issue in 2021
Come down to Middletown and Townsend! We need you!!! 🤣
The Eastern Panhandle is overwhelmed with these things. Can't go outside without them lighting all over us, and our homes. And they are super quick. Harder to stomp than a fly.
I was out with my family the other day, stomped a couple out, looked at another dad. “That makes 6 so far”
He says I got 7
Let the games begin
Conboy!!!! Awesome work bro! Love to see you making this content!
Thanks so much for the support, Rob! :) Hope you're doing well!
@@Andrew_the_Arborist Thanks man :) I'm doing ok, just started my Grad Degree.. 3 days un now.. it's starting to get real XD
I love to see your videos on environmental related topics! I often feel more impassioned about a subject when someone I appreciate is passionate about it too.
Keep up the great work!
@@Thecastofthelast Wow, that's great! Good luck - you're gonna be great! I hope to keep making science / environmental videos, so hopefully I can help you out there! :)
Started seeing these around my apartment. My state is asking people to report them in counties that aren't in quarantine (mine isn't), so I've been reporting and trying to step on them. They're pretty quick. Cool looking bugs, but invasive and a pain.
Is it easy to squish
@@rudijeffery5963no
Great video. Very informative. I wish they'd show this in schools. Little kids are curious and closest to the ground and they notice the smallest things.
I mixed 4 tablespoons Dawn dish soap, 2 cups apple cider vinegar, 1 cup water and various essential oils like lemongrass, eucalyptus and peppermint. Sneak up on them and spray with a spray bottle. After a few sprays thats it.
That's not true. Essential oils don't do anything
Haha I live in pa… moved to reading pa 2 years ago. Never seen them before at that time. I was so confused on what they were and why they were everywhere!!! Currently I see them all day all over the place.
excellent video,...enjoyed your commentary. We are in Pennsylvania, and they are BAD....we're near Hershey. I'm sorry to see this...(former Florida resident)
Thank you, Jeannie! They are definitely bad here in PA - I’m in the Philly area
What about the mold?
@@Andrew_the_Arboristwhat about the mold on the honeydew? Mold is so toxic. It made me so sick. What happens?!-the trees die and turn moldy?!
Great video! Looking at the cluster of them on the tree makes my skin crawl. :p
Thank you! And yeah me too 🤢
Omg me too 🤮
Thank you for this simple in depth video ☺️
Thanks for watching!
They seem to be able to see color. The Nimphs appear to be attracted to Black surfaces. In my West New York, NJ neighborhood the congregate on Black trash cans, black railings & even the black base of a waterfountain.
They're also attracted to 60 Hz acoustic frequencies, which could be useful for luring them into traps
Another great gift from China, Thanks China!!
lol the phone you used to type this comment was made In China. Be made at America’s government for setting up deals to make all of our products made from slaves in China
Typical ignorant American. They come here from US shipments. But sure let's keep voting against the programs that prevent invasive species and lets keep voting against regulations for corporations.
Not their fault it's ours
Made I'm China just like the smartphone you use and the shoes on your feet. You're welcome
@SpittinFactsDiknDrags ha! Now there's a knee slapper!
One landed on my leg yesterday. Smashed it
This video was informative but it’s not helping my situation. We cut a small tree down next to our front door where they were…in the small black spider with white dots stage. So now they’re all over the hand rail, the drive way, the door rim. How do we get rid of them since they’re not on a tree anymore??
Omg sane. We cut down an infested Tree of Heaven in our backyard that helped some., but now they’re all over our driveway and surrounding our back door and around our front porch. I hate them I’m scared to go out my doors fearing they might make their way inside.
I've been seeing them daily, live in Baltimore, I turn my neck to look out of the window and: TREE OF HEAVEN! lol
Nerf swords worked great! The kids and I have been hunting around pine trees. They jump before we can step on them but I bought 4 swords and they are AWESOME.
I live right on the water in New Jersey (I can see the NYC skyline after a 5 minute walk to my town's beach) and I found one in my bathroom yesterday after the window was left open. Felt pretty good to get rid of that thing lol
This video is great and very informative, I don't think this info was available at the time but the State of New Jersey now has a list of pesticides that are effective against the lanternfly.
Pesticides kill everything it touches. Including humans
@@johnmurphy1103💯
This guy is the most polite hell raiser and I'm more scared of him then the bugs
I wonder if diatomaceous earth would work on them..?
Fantastic, so informative!
Definitely gonna get on the site you mentioned to report them
This is the first year I've seen them, I'm right outside of Philadelphia
Your Friendly B. How many lanterflys have you step on?
Thanks for the helpful info. I live in Forks Township, PA and they are all over the place now. I tried to put tape with glue around the trees but was concerned about the birds and squirrels getting caught up on it. They like some trees more than others. I will try your suggestions. thank you!
Thank you for your comment! Best of luck combating them on your property!
Thank you for your channel and videos! Super informative and interesting
I live in Maryland and man these things are all over! When you touch one, the force it has when it jumps is pretty impressive. I can't kill bugs, IDK what to do 😞😞💔💔
I know what you mean, I can’t kill bugs either. But for each one of us, there are 100 that will happily kill these bugs, so it evens out lol
I was driving through Jessup, MD one day. One known fuel stop is that TA located in that town. I just happened to drive through there months ago and these giant insects were seen there during the day. I am not sure if they were spotted lantern butterflies. However, even after clearing the windshield, their families kept thudding the windshield when I left.
@@Joe_334 Spotted Lanternflies are not the same as butterflies. They are an invasive planthopper that devour crops & trees. Butterflies, on the other hand, pollinate plants and are good for ecosystems.
Also yikes, hope you didn't run out of wiper fluid!
was outside on break at work and getting some sun when I saw what I thought was an injured moth. almost smacked me in in face when it became airborne...following morning SPOTTED LANTERNFLY makes the news. .🤦♀️
Even since I seen my first one I thought it was a weevil of some sort then found out what it really was and now I kil everyone I see I even killed the one attacking my sunflowers but stomping them can be a bit difficult as they are quite fast reaction time wise and it seems the older they get in their life cycle the slower they react as the little babies (black and white) respond and move faster than the adult which is interesting
I saw tons of them living in Beijing. Comprehensive video!
So the pattern here is PA importing Chinese landscaping materials.
EXCELLENT INFORMATION AND TIPS FOR CONTROLLING THEIR POPULATION. THANK YOU.
First time I saw one was when I went to see the Great Wall of China, I didn't know what it was so I left it alone. When i came back around a few hours later, someone stomped on it. I thought it was sad but I get it now why they did it.
At least it's not an invasive species in China
It’s taken me 2 weeks to get rid of them on my fig tree. I felt terrible killing them by my local Department of Environmental Control told me Lanterflies are becoming too invasive and now the Dept. of Agriculture has them under their watch. I knocking them off the tree to the ground to stomp them, but ended up with the glue tape. Once they become full grown they are much easier to catch. I’m hoping not much damage to my fig tree.
You comparing yourself to the newly born pale lantern fly cracked me up haha
😂😂
I first encountered them while visiting New York. I accidentally stepped on one and felt bad. Glad I know more now
These things have no sense of direction.. they fly right into your face. They're all over NJ right now
It's true lol. They really just fly until they smack into something 😂
I went running, avoided five but swear one was running me down, I ran to right then left but it was determined to land on me, I eventually burst out laughing....... I'm over them, I hate bugs 😤😅.
We were in Times Square sitting outside, they were all over the place. A bus of them just arrived at the Port Authority.
I seen a praying mantis chomping on one today. 50 mil a year & 500 lost jobs just wow.
That mantis is doing a good job, lol
The praying mantis is the natural enemy. They've been becoming more abundant this year, I've seen more than I have in the past. I'm thinking about looking into raising some mantis' and letting them into the wild.
Don't they eat those murder hornets too? I love seeing them chomping on pests!
@Joanna Martin www.cnn.com/2019/12/23/us/asian-giant-hornet-washington-state-scn-trnd/index.html
@@iUnderdog1that’s a good idea
I use an insecticidal soap mixed with white vinegar.
The acid salts and vinegar acid breaks through their shell.
I have killed more than 200 nymphs in the last month.
Put the bottle on stream, get up close and hose them.
The mixture does not harm plants.
I’ve done this, but why do they jump at you when you spray them? This freaks me out big time.,
@@Ki-lk5wn they can only jump forward. If you face them they will fly into you.
I spray the wings which limits their distance.
Once they are grounded I stomp them.
I remember when I was baking cookies with my youngest brother Jeremiah and my two other little brothers Zach and Jed were watching us. Just then, we saw a spotted lanternfly sitting on the deck. I said, "I think that's a lanternfly." And Jeremiah said, "yeah. It is." And Jed said, "it's so beautiful, but it needs to die." So Zach grabbed a fire extinguisher 🧯, went outside, and smashed it to death.
o7 😂 what an epic story
💀
The Tree of Heaven (Ailanthus) is also known as the stink tree because of the smell it has once you break off the leaves. And they are all over the place in the NE and the Midwest.
I killed 4 so far. I'm in jersey. They're soo gross looking idk why but the red part is really grosses me out 🤮
I’m scared of them and I definitely don’t want to step on them! Ewww! They are all over my front porch…I don’t have trees near me. Is there something that I can spray my porch and porch furniture with that would keep them away?!!!!
They are beautiful! I live in New Jersey and my area is infested with these beautiful invasive pests.
Doreen ⭐ how many lanterflys have you step on by count # ?
They SUCK!!!!
Thanks for the info on reporting to your local dept of agriculture!
What if people put bottles with large holes on them, poked tiny holes in the cap so that they could breathe & sent them to back to their native country for free or, better yet, cash? As pets?
3 tsp Neem oil and 3 tsp dish soap in a spray bottle and it's like you at the arcade in Coney Island! You squirt one and in a second it pops like popcorn! Neem is also used for organic farming so you don't need to worry about poisoning yourself. Nice video gonna subscribe.
I have the bug a salt, which is amazing at killing them. If they are too high up, I use my pellet gun as target practice
I just went to New York for vacation, and saw these things everywhere. I didn't know what they were until my dad dramatically stomped on it and told me they're invasive and we have to kill them. Needless to say, I probably killed thousands just stomping everywhere and I feel like a hero.
We have probably killed 500+ this week just on our deck. Can’t even sit outside!
Thank you for your service lol - that's a lot!
ruclips.net/video/yjOKIOOw1ZA/видео.html
Effective trap. 😊💖😊
Me Crawford
I haven’t sat outside this entire summer. These suckers took over my backyard , driveway and my front porch
I failed getting one of there earlier today. Failed miserably. I learned a lot though so im now armed with knowledge and hope th have a better kill rate. I'm in Jersey City, NJ btw. Just starting seeing them and also check my car before leaving to avoid hitchhiking. I killed one in my car door jam before leaving for work.