Showing posts with label pest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pest. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 5, 2023

Summer is here - time to put your Hornet Hunter hat back on

Karla Salp
Communications

man wearing sunglasses putting on a tan hat with a hornet on it
Gov. Inslee dons a hornet hunter hat while 
touring the hornet detection area in 2022. Gov.
Inslee and the Washington Legislature have been
very supportive of the hornet eradication efforts.
July is finally here and you know what that means around WSDA: time to start trapping for hornets! Our hornet trappers are already out in the field setting hornet traps in Whatcom County.

Since the first confirmed detection of the northern giant hornet (Vespa mandarina, also known as the Asian giant hornet) in 2019, there has been overwhelming interest from the public to help eradicate this invasive pest.

WSDA has welcomed this community support, leading to a hybrid government-public response that has been revolutionary – and effective. More than half of the confirmed hornet detections in the state have come from public reports. Three of the four nests eradicated in the state were found as the direct result of public reports.

The community has played a game-changing role in WSDA’s efforts to eradicate the hornets from our state. Although we had no detections last year, we’re not out of the woods yet.

We still need you.

northern giant hornet on paper plates
Hornet sighting reported
to WSDA via social media
in 2020.
Your eyes, ears, and traps are still needed to detect any hornets that might still be lurking in the state. Here are three ways that you can help.

  1. Trapping. WSDA has established a Public Hornet Trapping project, which provides community members with information on how to build and check hornet traps and report any hornets that are caught. The traps are placed in July and are left up through November.
  2. Watch a Wasp Nest. The public and WSDA staff have witnessed northern giant hornets repeatedly attacking paper wasp nests. These nests can easily be found under the eaves of many buildings. By joining the “Watch a Wasp Nest” program, you commit to spending five minutes a week observing paper wasp nests on your property and logging activity, including whether you notice hornets at the nest.
  3. Report sightings. Helping detect northern giant hornets can be as simple as being aware of your surroundings. If you think you spot one, get a photo if you safely can. Report suspected sightings with as much detail as possible, including where the insect was spotted, what it was doing, and if it flew off, the direction in which it headed.

EVERY hornet report matters. Whether found while trapping, watching paper wasp nests, or just being observant when you are out and about, it is critical to report each and every suspect hornet sighting. We get hundreds – if not thousands – of false reports each year, but we gladly accept them because it means you are on the lookout and that means we receive the few but critical confirmed detections we need to eradicate the hornets for good. 

Tuesday, June 20, 2023

Six ways you can help #BeatTheBeetles

Karla Salp
Communications

beetle in a green bag beetle trap
First WSDA-trapped Japanese beetle of 2023
The first Japanese beetle of 2023 has been detected! Our Japanese beetle trappers were out checking traps this morning and they discovered the first beetles in a trap near the high school in Grandview. So the adults are here and it is time to take action!

We conducted our second beetle treatment this spring and WSDA trappers have placed hundreds of traps in and near previous beetle detection sites that we’ll be checking regularly until the fall.

We’re doing everything we can to protect schools, parks, gardens, and farms from this invasive pest, but there are many ways that you can help.

  1. Report Japanese beetle sightings. If you spot a Japanese beetle (or several,) snap a photo and report them online or by emailing pestprogram@agr.wa.gov.

  2. Place your own traps. You can join the trapping effort by placing your own traps. Traps can be obtained at local farm and garden centers as well as online. If you do trap, please either count and report your trap catches online (with a photo of your catch!) or drop off traps with beetles in them at the following locations:

         - Valley Wide Cooperative (Grandview)
         - Riders True Value (Grandview)
         - Wapato City Hall (Wapato)

  3. Treat your property. If you notice beetles on your property, you may want to apply an effective treatment for adults (WSDA’s treatment earlier in the year was for grubs.) Washington State University has provided guidance to homeowners in English and Spanish on the best products for Japanese beetles (not all products listed for Japanese beetles have been proven effective.) If you choose to treat your property, follow the label instructions on using the product exactly.

  4. Graphic asking people not to spread Japanese beetle through yard waste, potted plants, or soil.
    Don’t move plants.
    If you live in or near an area where Japanese beetle has been found, do not move plants. Sharing plants from your yard with a friend or neighbor could spread the beetle from your yard to theirs. Don’t purchase plants from inside the quarantine area and take them home if you are outside the quarantine area. You could bring Japanese beetle into your yard.

  5. Keep yard waste and soil in the quarantine area. Yard waste and soil could also transport beetles. Moving plants, yard waste, or soil out of the quarantine area is prohibited if you live in the quarantine area. Instead, WSDA has established a yard waste drop-off site at 875 Bridgeview Rd. Grandview, WA.

  6. Spread the word, not the beetles. Learn more about Japanese beetles and encourage your friends and neighbors to help detect and eradicate this pest. On our Japanese beetle webpage, you can learn more about the beetle, how you can help, join our Washington Japanese Beetle Watch Facebook group, and sign up for email alerts to stay informed about the project.
Successfully eradicating the Japanese beetle from Washington is going to take several years. By working together, we can protect Washington from this invasive pest and #BeatTheBeetle. 

Espanol

Seis maneras en las que puede ayudar a #CombatirLosEscarabajos
 
Se detectó el primer escarabajo japonés de 2023. Esta mañana, nuestros tramperos de escarabajos japoneses revisaron las trampas y descubrieron los primeros escarabajos en una trampa cerca de la escuela secundaria en Grandview. Los adultos ya están aquí; por lo tanto, es momento de poner manos a la obra. 

Durante esta primavera, hemos realizado nuestro segundo tratamiento contra los escarabajos y los tramperos del Washington State Department of Agriculture (WSDA) han colocado cientos de trampas en los lugares anteriores donde se detectaron escarabajos y cerca de ellos, los cuales revisaremos con regularidad hasta el otoño. 

Estamos haciendo todo lo posible por proteger escuelas, parques, jardines y granjas de esta plaga invasora, pero usted también puede ayudar de numerosas maneras. 
  1. Notifique avistamientos de escarabajos japoneses. Si ve un escarabajo japonés (o varios), tome una fotografía y notifique en línea o por correo electrónico a través de pestprogram@agr.wa.gov. 

  2. Coloque sus propias trampas. Puede colaborar con los esfuerzos de colocación de trampas al colocar las suyas. Puede obtener las trampas en centros agrícolas y de jardinería locales, así como por internet. Si atrapa escarabajos, cuéntelos y notifique en línea (adjunte una fotografía de los escarabajos capturados) o entregue las trampas con los escarabajos en los siguientes lugares:

         - Valley Wide Cooperative (Grandview)
         - Riders True Value (Grandview)
         - Wapato City Hall (Wapato)

  3. Realice un tratamiento en su propiedad. Si detecta escarabajos en su propiedad, puede aplicar un tratamiento eficaz contra los adultos (a principios de año, el tratamiento del WSDA era contra los gusanos). Washington State University ha elaborado pautas para los propietarios en inglés y español sobre los mejores productos contra los escarabajos japoneses (no todos los productos que se enumeran para combatir el escarabajo japonés han demostrado ser eficaces). Si decide realizar un tratamiento en su propiedad, siga con exactitud las instrucciones que figuran en la etiqueta sobre cómo usar el producto. 

  4. No traslade plantas de un lugar a otro. Si vive en una zona donde se detectaron escarabajos japoneses o cerca de ella, no traslade plantas. Compartir plantas de su jardín con amigos o vecinos podría propagar los escarabajos de su jardín al de ellos. No compre ni lleve a su casa plantas que pertenecen a la zona de cuarentena si usted vive fuera de dicha zona. De esta forma, podría traer al escarabajo japonés a su jardín. 

  5. Mantenga los desechos de jardín y la tierra en la zona de cuarentena. Los desechos de jardín y la tierra también podrían transportar escarabajos. Está prohibido trasladar plantas, desechos de jardín o tierra fuera de la zona de cuarentena si vive en dicha zona. En cambio, el WSDA estableció un sitio de depósito de desechos de jardín en 875 Bridgeview Rd. Grandview, WA.

  6. Difunda el mensaje para que los escarabajos no se propaguen. Obtenga más información sobre los escarabajos japoneses y aliente a sus amigos y vecinos a colaborar con la detección y erradicación de esta plaga. En nuestra página web del escarabajo japonés, puede leer más sobre el escarabajo y cómo puede ayudar, puede unirse al grupo de Facebook “Washington Japanese Beetle Watch” (Detección del escarabajo japonés en Washington) y puede registrarse para recibir alertas por correo electrónico para mantenerse al tanto sobre el proyecto. 
Erradicar definitivamente el escarabajo japonés de Washington va a demorar varios años. Si trabajamos juntos, lograremos proteger a Washington de esta plaga invasora y #CombatirLosEscarabajos.  

 

Thursday, April 13, 2023

Sign up to help WSDA watch for high-priority invasive pests

Karla Salp
Communications

Image: spotted lanternfly. Text: Sign up to join the WSDA pest pathway project
Is tomato fruit borer lurking in your garden? Or is Scots pine blister rust on your tree? Early detection is critical for protecting the state’s forests, parks, farms, and gardens from invasive pests and diseases.

That’s why WSDA’s Pest Program has a new project to be on the lookout for some of the nation’s highest-priority pests and plant diseases that are not yet known to be in the state.

The program will look for national high-priority pests including pests like spotted lanternfly, which has rapidly spread and decimated vineyards in the Eastern U.S.; apple proliferation phytoplasma, a type of bacteria that inhabits, impedes, and kills orchards; and the tomato brown rugose virus, which stunts tomatoes making their fruits unpalatable.

To look for these and other* pests, the WSDA Pest Program needs your help. They are asking farms, community gardens, parks, and even private property owners to sign up to participate in the project this summer. There are two ways to participate:

  • Summer trapping – WSDA trappers will place traps early in the summer and check them several times throughout the season. The traps will be removed in the fall.
  • Single site visit – WSDA staff will visit the site once to perform a visual inspection for pests. 

Specifically, the team is looking for properties that will have one or more of the following on-site this summer: 

  • Fruit or nut trees
  • Vegetables
  • Fruiting shrubs/vines
  • Ornamental trees/shrubs

While anyone in Washington is welcome to sign up, the program is especially interested in sites near highways or ports.

If you are willing to participate by offering your property for trapping or a site visit, please sign up to have your location considered. The Pest Program will review your information and contact you by May 15, 2023, to let you know if your property has been selected as a pest survey site for the upcoming season.

WSDA has a long history of looking for invasive pests to prevent them from establishing in the state. For example, the longest-running program is the invasive moth program, which has kept spongy moth (formerly known as gypsy moth) from establishing in Washington (despite numerous introductions) for almost 50 years. Public support and participation have always played a key role in protecting our state from invasive pests and diseases.

With your support and early detection, there is a much higher chance of eradicating or significantly slowing the spread of any new pest. 

*The complete list of pests for this project:

Scientific Name

Common Name

Lycorma delicatula

Spotted lanternfly

Adoxophyes orana

Summer fruit tortrix moth

Anthonomus rubi

Strawberry blossom weevil

Diabrotica speciosa

Cucurbit beetle

Helicoverpa armigera

Old world bollworm

Heteronychus arator

Black maize beetle

Neoleucinodes elegantalis

Tomato fruit borer

Thaumatotibia leucotreta

False codling moth

Phthorimea absoluta

Tomato leafminer

Candidatus Phytoplasma australiense 16SrXII-B

Australian grapevine yellows

Candidatus Phytoplasma mali 16SrX-A

Apple proliferation

Candidatus Phytoplasma phoenicium 16SrIX-B

Almond witches' broom

Candidatus Phytoplasma prunorum 16SrX-F

European stone fruit yellows

Candidatus Phytoplasma solani 16SrXII-A

Bois noir; Stolbur

Candidatus Phytoplasma ziziphi

Jujube witches' broom

Cronartium flaccidum

Scots pine blister rust

Magnaporthiopsis maydis

Late wilt of corn

Orthotospovirus Groundnut bud necrosis virus

Groundnut bud necrosis virus (GBNV)

Hymenoscyphus fraxineus

Ash dieback

Tobamovirus Cucumber green mottle mosaic virus

Cucumber green mottle mosaic virus (CGMMV)

Tobamovirus Tomato brown rugose fruit virus

Tomato brown rugose (ToBRFV)

Alectra vogelii

Yellow witchweed

Onopordum acaulon

Horse thistle

 

Thursday, August 25, 2022

Pest alert: Everett area residents asked to report sightings of oversized, striped-eyed grasshopper

Cassie Cichorz and Karla Salp
Pest Program and Communications

Close up of the head of an Egyptian grasshopper showing the striped eye
Egyptian grasshoppers have striped eyes
Photo credit: Hectonichus, CC BY-SA 4.0,
via Wikimedia Commons
It is grasshopper season and, if you live near Everett, it is a good time to keep your eyes peeled for an unusually large grasshopper with unusual eyes.

An Everett resident reported one Egyptian grasshopper (Anacridium aegyptium) to Washington State entomologists earlier this year and USDA entomologists recently confirmed it as the first detection of the insect in Washington State. The Washington State Department of Agriculture will conduct visual surveys in the area but is asking the public to also be on the lookout for this large grasshopper with striped eyes.

The grasshoppers typically feed on plant leaves. Adults are usually olive, gray, or brown in color and are most likely to be seen toward the end of summer. Young grasshoppers can be green and may blend in with vegetation. Males can grow to over two inches

Green grasshopper with striped eyes on a green leaf
While young Egyptian grasshoppers are green, 
they still have striped eyes.
Photo credit: Metin Gulesci

long and females can be almost three inches long. The key to identifying these insects is their eyes - they have distinct black striping on their eyes that sets them apart from other grasshoppers.

“An overwintering grasshopper could easily hitchhike, so this is another case where we are asking the public to help us figure out if this is just a single specimen,” Sven Spichiger, WSDA managing entomologist, said. Only one living, but sluggish, grasshopper has been confirmed. There is currently no evidence of an established population.

Residents near Everett who believe they have seen this insect should send a photo to pestprogram@agr.wa.gov for identification and include the location where it was spotted. If you believe you have seen one outside of Washington State, please take a picture of it, note the location, and report it to your State Plant Regulatory Official or State Plant Health Director.

Adult Egyptian grasshopper on a green leaf
Adult Egyptian grasshopper
Photo credit: Metin Gulesci
Egyptian grasshoppers are generally regarded as a minor pest of concern in their native habitat but could be an occasional pest to crops, orchards, and vineyards. USDA is gathering available scientific information to help determine the potential risk of this insect.

Friday, August 5, 2022

Pest alert: Have you seen this huge moth? It just showed up in Bellevue

Karla Salp
Communications

The non-native atlas moth compared with large
moths found in North America. 
Washington State entomologists are asking the public to report sightings of the atlas moth after one was recently discovered in Bellevue. There are no known traps for atlas moths, so WSDA is hoping to determine whether there are additional moths in the area based on public reports. With this single atlas moth detection only, there is no evidence that an atlas moth population is established in Washington.

Residents are encouraged to photograph, collect, and report atlas moths if they are seen. The moths do not pose a public health threat and thus can safely be photographed, handled, and collected.

“This is a ‘gee-whiz’ type of insect because it is so large,” Sven Spichiger, WSDA managing entomologist, said. “Even if you aren’t on the lookout for insects, this is the type that people get their phones out and take a picture of – they are that striking.”

Washington State residents who believe they have seen this moth should send a photo to pestprogram@agr.wa.gov for identification and include the location where it was spotted. While there are no reports of atlas moth anywhere else in the U.S., if you believe you’ve found it outside of Washington State, please take a picture of it, note the location, and report it to the State Plant Regulatory Official or State Plant Health Director in your state.

The atlas moth found on a Bellvue garage
The moth was initially reported to WSDA via a University of Washington professor on July 7. WSDA entomologists identified it as an atlas moth and sent it to USDA for confirmation, which is the standard process for new pest detections. USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Investigation Service confirmed the specimen as an atlas moth on July 27 and it is believed to be the first confirmed detection of the moth in the United States.
Atlas moth compared to a man's hand

One of the world’s largest known moths with a wingspan of up to almost 10 inches, it is also a federally quarantined pest – meaning it is illegal to obtain, harbor, rear, or sell live moths whether adults, eggs, larvae, or pupae without a permit from USDA. USDA has more information about permits on its invertebrate pets web page. While there is minimal research about the moth, entomologists believe host plants may include apple and cherry.

“This is normally a tropical moth. We are not sure it could survive here,” Spichiger said. “USDA is gathering available scientific and technical information about this moth and will provide response recommendations, but in the meantime, we hope residents will help us learn if this was a one-off escapee or whether there might indeed be a population in the area.” 


Note: This blog was updated on August 17 to reflect that rather than being the world's largest moth, it is one of the world's largest moths. 

Friday, May 20, 2022

This summer, "adopt a wasp" to help monitor for Asian giant hornets

Cassie Cichorz
Pest Program

WSDA invites you to help watch for Asian giant hornets (Vespa mandarinia) this summer. Join our new citizen science project to adopt a structure with paper wasp nests and observe the nests weekly from June through October. If you'd like to do even more, WSDA will continue to invite residents to participate in citizen scientist trapping for hornets too.

Over the last two years, residents of Whatcom County have noticed hornets attacking paper wasp nests. In 2021, WSDA tracked a hornet and observed it repeatedly visiting the same paper wasp nest. Each visit lasted five to ten minutes and the hornet removed paper wasp larvae.  

Paper wasps can grow to about ¾ of an inch long and have a well-defined “wasp waist” that makes them easy to identify. Paper wasps are typically not aggressive and do not readily attack people, but they can sting if threatened. They form small colonies and build hanging, open comb nests on building eaves, frames, abandoned cars, or branches of trees and shrubs. Paper wasp nests vary in size and are usually gray to brown in color. They are made up of many exposed cells that are less than an inch deep. Nests typically range from the size of a quarter to as wide as a coffee can lid, but can be larger.


Although we invite anyone in Washington to participate in adopting a paper wasp nest, we are particularly interested in observations from Whatcom, Skagit, Island, San Juan, Snohomish, King, Jefferson, and Clallam counties.

LOCATE

Starting in June, locate nests that you have access to and can monitor through October. Log the nest locations using the Adopt A Paper Wasp Registration Form. After submission, you’ll receive an email confirmation which will include a unique Site ID assigned to your nest location. You will need to save this Site ID to use during weekly check-ins. (Please do not register any sites before June 1.) Click here to access the registration form. When you register, you’ll have the option to sign up for weekly email reminders to check your wasp nests. You can also sign up for weekly text reminders by texting JOIN WASP to 1-800-443-6684.

MONITOR

Each week visit the nests, observe, and report online if any hornet or wasp activity is happening at the nest. WSDA asks you to monitor the nests for at least five minutes during the day once per week, but you can check the nests for as long and often as you would like. 

REPORT

After monitoring you will need to report each of your observations on the Paper Wasp Nest Check-in form. You will also need your Site ID that was received in a confirmation email. Click here to report and access the Check-in form.

However, if you think you spot an Asian giant hornet (it will be significantly larger than the paper wasps), safely take a photo and report it at agr.wa.gov/hornets or by emailing hornets@agr.wa.gov.

Stay Connected

WSDA is dedicated to working with the public and to providing information on Asian giant hornets.

·        Join the Asian giant hornet Facebook group.

·        Join the Pest Program email listserv.

Follow WSDA on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and Twitter

Thursday, November 18, 2021

WSDA Pest Program trapping season wraps up

Karla Salp
Communications

Each year, WSDA’s Pest Program sets thousands of traps throughout the state to catch invasive species that could threaten agriculture. The program surveys for over 130 pests – most of which have not yet been detected in the state.

Japanese beetles

Dozens of Japanese beetles in a ziplock bag
Dozens of Japanese beetles collected from a single trap

It was a record year for Japanese beetle (Popillia japonica) catches - unwelcome news to farmers and homeowners alike. There was one catch in Washington across the river from Portland, a few as usual near Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, but more than 24,000 in the Grandview area. Catching so many in Grandview this year was surprising considering that only three were caught in 2020 between Grandview and Sunnyside combined.

Japanese beetles on rose bud
Japanese beetles devour a 
Grandview resident's roses
The overwhelming number of catches in the Grandview area has many implications. First, WSDA has proposed a 49-square-mile Japanese beetle quarantine to restrict the movement of soil, yard debris, and plant materials that could spread the beetles. Second, WSDA is planning an extensive, multi-year eradication program to try to eradicate the pest – no easy task given the number of beetles already in the area. Finally, WSDA will conduct extensive outreach and trapping in Yakima and Benton counties in 2022. 

Japanese beetles attack over 300 different types of plants including roses, hops, grapes, corn, lawns, and many other crops grown in area gardens and farms.

If there is a silver lining to this beetle infestation, it is that the city, businesses, schools, and people in the vicinity have been open and willing to do what they can to help with WSDA’s response to this invasive pest. Another positive: although nearly 100 traps were placed around area plant nurseries, no beetles were found at the nurseries.

Invasive moths

Male Lymantria dispar
Our trappers set nearly 23,000 traps statewide this year looking for Lymantria dispar – the moth formerly known as the gypsy moth (a new common name has not yet been established.) This moth has devastated forests in the Eastern U.S. where it is established – eating over 300 different types of trees and plants. When there are cycles of large populations, they can strip entire forests from the canopy to the ground, leaving an eerie winter-like scene at the beginning of summer.

This year was a low year for Lymantria dispar catches – only six were found in the entire state. Unfortunately, one of those moths was caught in Eastern Washington just north of Kettle Falls - which is unusual in itself as most moths are normally trapped in Western Washington – and it was also a more concerning variety – Lymantria dispar asiatica, formerly known as the Asian gypsy moth. Lymantria dispar asiatica eats a wider variety of trees (including evergreens) and the females can fly, allowing them to spread more easily.

Apple maggot

apple maggot fly
Apple maggot fly
Our apple maggot (Rhagoletis pomonella) program continued its work of safeguarding Washington’s global reputation for delicious – and pest-free – apples. The program’s work consists of trapping pest-free areas to ensure they remain pest-free as well as trapping around threatened orchards that are near known apple maggot detection sites.

The good news this year is that many of our main apple-growing regions had no catches at all this year: Adams, Asotin, Benton, Douglas, Franklin, Grant, Lincoln, and Stevens counties. Less encouraging was catching 120 apple maggots in Kittitas County and 843 in Okanogan County.

In areas where apple maggots have been detected outside of the apple maggot quarantine area, the county pest boards are responsible for taking aggressive action. WSDA and the Apple Maggot Working Group (an advisory council composed of state and local government, industry representatives, and researchers) began working last year to examine how best to address the growing apple maggot problem in the unquarantined area of Okanogan County. That effort will continue over the coming months.

Asian giant hornet

Asian giant hornet queen trapped by chopsticks against tree with combs capped with white silk from the nest in the tree showing
Asian giant hornet queen from the
third nest with part of her nest
Our Asian giant hornet (Vespa mandarinia) team had a busy season – finding and eradicating three hornet nests in August and September. Every nest was in a tree cavity, each demanding a creative approach to remove the nest. The most challenging nest was about 15 feet up a tree.

Public trapping and reporting again played a major role in locating the nests – two of the three were located after reports from area residents. Despite existing research indicating that the hornets predominately nest in the ground in their native range, all four nests eradicated in Washington over the last two years have been in tree cavities.

Our hornet program will continue for at least three more years. In order for the hornets to be considered eradicated, we must have three consecutive years with no detections. The biggest challenge to success is the lack of a highly-effective trap. While the traps we use catch hornets, they do not appear to be irresistible to them. USDA continues to work on a lure that will be more attractive to the hornets and we wish them much success!

Exotic wood-boring insects

velvet longhorn beetle
Velvet longhorn beetle
Many of the pests we look for are never found. Such is usually the case with our exotic wood-boring insect survey. Imagine trapping for years and never finding what you are looking for. As disappointing as it may be not to find anything, that’s exactly what we hope the results will be as we look for potentially harmful new pests.

This year, WSDA put out over 400 exotic wood-boring insect traps at high-risk sites such as ports, shipping distribution sites, and transfer stations. Trapped areas and other high-risk areas are visually surveyed for signs of wood boring insect activity. One day, they found one.

“This is the first time in all of these years I have trapped a target species,” Don Kitchen, one of the members of the beetle survey team, said.

This past summer, the velvet longhorn beetle (Trichoferus campestris) was detected for the first time in the state in King County near Kent. WSDA responded by setting more traps and conducting visual surveys of the area, although no additional beetles were found. WSDA will continue to put out additional traps, conduct visual surveys of the area, and conduct outreach about the beetle in 2022.

The work continues

WSDA’s Pest Program has had a busy year – and this roundup covers just a handful of the pests they monitor. With their continued work and the help of the public looking for and reporting suspected invasive species, our state should be protected from harmful pests for years to come. 

Wednesday, October 27, 2021

State entomologists call for public help after possible spotted lanternfly detection

Karla Salp
Communications

Photo submitted with suspected spotted lanternfly report
UPDATE: After this blog was initially posted, WSDA was alerted that the photo submitted with the report was a previously published online photo. Public reports are critical to detecting invasive species in Washington. However, if you are submitting a report and were unable to obtain your own photo of the specimen, please indicate in the report that you are including an online photo that represents what you saw and that the photo is not yours.

WSDA is asking the public to keep a watch for spotted lanternfly (Lycorma delicatula), a potentially destructive pest that may have been observed in the Omak region.

Spotted lanternfly (SLF), a native to Asia, attacks primarily grapes, but also has been sighted in other crops such as hops, apples, peach, and other fruit trees. Should it become established in Washington, spotted lanternfly could threaten many Washington iconic crops and result in costly quarantines and increased pesticide use to manage the pest.

Last week, the Washington Invasive Species Council (WISC) received a possible sighting of the pest in the Omak area and informed WSDA and the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The possible sighting included a photograph and also mentioned seeing five live specimens. Despite a search of the area, WSDA entomologists could not confirm the report. WSDA is asking the public, especially those in Okanogan County, to examine their trees and other outdoor surfaces for spotted lanternfly adults and egg masses.

“Our search revealed abundant host material in the area,” Sven Spichiger, WSDA managing entomologist said. “For the next several weeks, we ask people to look for both adults and egg masses. If they think they found any suspected life stage of the pest, they should report it.”   

The unconfirmed report comes during a month when WISC, WSDA, and other state agencies have been requesting that the public report tree-of-heaven locations as part of an effort to proactively locate and remove this preferred host of the spotted lanternfly. The outreach also encouraged the public to look for and report possible SLF sightings, although SLF populations are not known to be in the state at this time. SLF poses no threat to human or animal health.

“This is another example of the important role everyone plays in stopping invasive species,” said Justin Bush, the council’s executive coordinator. “If you spot a suspected invasive species, immediately notify the council through our website or phone app called Washington Invasives. You may be reporting a new invasive species and help prevent millions, if not billions, of dollars in damage and loss.”

Although the unconfirmed report does not indicate that an SLF population exists in Washington at this time, WSDA plans to survey the area for the pest in 2022. Because it is too late to survey this year, public aid in looking for and reporting possible sightings now could provide critical information about the pest’s whereabouts. A rapid response is required to successfully eradicate SLF if a population exists.

When reporting possible SLF sightings, include a photograph, date, and location of the sighting and most importantly – collect the specimens. Reports can be made using WISC’s online reporting form or mobile app or by emailing WSDA at pestprogram@agr.wa.gov or calling 1-800-443-6684. After reporting, suspect specimens and egg masses can be taken to WSU Extension offices. More information about spotted lanternfly can be found on WSDA’s website. Report tree-of-heaven locations to WISC.

Spotted lanternfly first arrived in the U.S. in 2014 in Pennsylvania. Since then, it has been spreading through several eastern states while popping up in other places throughout the country. When established in an area, it can cause potential problems for growers as well as homeowners. 

Additional photos

This blog was updated on November 1, 2020 to provide updated information about the origins of the photograph submitted with the report. 


Monday, October 11, 2021

Tree-of-heaven reports safeguard state from another invasive pest

Cassie Cichorz
Pest Program Outreach Coordinator

Adult spotted lanternfly
Photo credit: Pennsylvania Dept. of Agriculture
The reports of tree-of-heaven are rolling in now that the Washington Invasive Species Council has launched a month-long effort to identify where this invasive tree is located. This is the first step in an effort to proactively prepare for the arrival of another dread invasive species that prefers tree-of-heaven: the spotted lanternfly.

Spotted lanternfly (SLF) is an invasive piercing-sucking insect. It feeds on a wide variety of plants including apples, grapes, cherries, hops, plums, walnut and many more species.

Damage incurred by spotted lanternfly includes oozing sap, wilting, leaf curling, and tree dieback. SLF also secretes large amounts of honeydew (feces), which enables the growth of sooty mold on vegetation and fruit.

Currently, it has only become established the northeastern United States, although it has been found dead in Oregon as a hitchhiker on goods shipped from the northeast. More alarmingly, more than fifty spotted lanternflies have been found both alive and dead in California at state border agricultural inspection stations as well as on air cargo flights.

Display showing various
life stages of spotted lanternfly
Most adults are bad fliers and will be found with their wings closed. Adults begin to lay grey-brown egg clusters in September on tree bark and outdoor surfaces. They will cover the egg masses with a wax coating that resembles mud. When performing a survey for spotted lanternfly, check items in the area such as outdoor furniture, stonework, firewood piles, and rusty items.

Adult ID

  • 1’’ long, ½’’ wide at rest
  • Yellow abdomen with black bands
  • Black head and legs
  • Light gray forewings with black spots and a rear speckled band
  • Scarlet hindwings with black spots and rear black and white bars

Spotted lanternfly is likely to infest tree-of-heaven if it arrives. Tree-of-heaven is rapid-growing and its bark is often compared to cantaloupe skin. Mapping known tree-of-heaven populations allows Washington to plan control efforts, keeping our state safe from this invasive pest.

Report spotted lanternfly sightings to the Washington State Department of Agriculture by e-mailing PestProgram@agr.wa.gov or calling (800) 443-6684. You can also report known tree-of-heaven locations by visiting the Washington Invasive Species Council’s website

Thursday, September 30, 2021

Taking hornet nest removal to new heights

Karla Salp
Communications

WSDA's Pest Program uses a buck lift to access
the nest 15 feet up in an alder tree

Last week, WSDA’s Pest Program removed the third Asian giant hornet (Vespa mandarinia) nest of 2021, making it the fourth nest removed since the invasive hornet was first detected in Washington in December 2019. All of the nests have been in the same general area east of Blaine.

Most research on these hornets suggests that they normally nest in the ground and more rarely in trees. But so far, 100 percent of nests found in Washington have been in tree cavities. The entrance to this latest nest was over 15 feet above the ground. A thermal-imaging camera showed the nest itself was below the nest entrance.

The challenge posed by working on a nest so high up was compounded by the fact that the nest was also surrounded by dense trees and vegetation – especially blackberry patches as much as eight feet tall. The team of entomologists and others from the pest program had to use some new tools to eradicate this nest, including a rented bucket lift to raise them over the bulk of the vegetation so they could work safely at the nest entrance.

Just as in the other nest removals, once at the entrance, the team sealed up the tree and vacuumed most of the hornets out before sealing the entrance.

Inspiring Halloween costumes everywhere -
Dan DeVoe prepares to take down the tree with the nest

In addition to the height of the nest, it was also in a decaying alder tree. This made it risky to safely cut the tree down. A trail steward from the Department of Natural Resources was able to help. Wearing a bulky hornet suit, he cut the tree so it dropped right on target. Once the tree was down, he cut it into sections and split the tree open so the team could finish collecting the remaining hornets and the nest.

Queen and the nest
Here is what was found in the latest nest: 

  • 10 combs
  • 674 total cells
  • 86 empty cells
  • 128 eggs
  • 202 larvae
  • 261 capped cells
  • 185 workers
  • 0 males
  • 1 queens
  • TOTAL LIFE STAGES – 777

Luckily, none of the three nests eradicated this year have had new queens, meaning the nest was found and removed before the queens could emerge, mate, and left to start new nests next year.

Two of the three nests this year were found from reports made by local residents, and this is the critical time to find nests before creating new queens. If you think you see an Asian giant hornet, take a photo and submit a report at agr.wa.gov/hornets.

WSDA/DNR/USDA team that removed the 
third nest of 2021, fourth nest total

Video of activity at the nest as well as the nest removal is available on WSDA's YouTube channel