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As delightful as that autumn air may feel, your open windows may also serve as an open door to the invasive brown marmorated stink bug. There’s a fair chance you’ve already been acquainted ...
The brown marmorated stink bug (Halyomorpha halys) has emerged as a highly invasive pest with significant economic and ecological consequences across multiple continents. Research in this field ...
In the U.S., the most common is the "brown marmorated stink bug," which is believed to have been introduced in the mid-1990s. Since then, this stink bug has been identified in 38 states and the ...
Stink bug season is here and with it brings millions of brown, shield-shaped insects out from their hiding places and into the spaces where you’d rather not have them. No, they aren’t cicadas ...
You may have already seen the aptly-named brown marmorated stink bug, a native of East Asia, climbing on your windows, doors, siding, and more as it searches for a wintering spot. The first stink ...
At first the eggs of the green stink bug are yellow to green in color but then turn to pink or grey. Brown stink bug eggs are whiteish. Young nymphs of both varieties are shaped like their adult ...