New Potential Pest Raises Big Stink
COLUMBIA, MO.
A new stinkier stinkbug may hitchhike into
Missouri this year to destroy crops and
upset homeowners, says a University of
Missouri Extension entomologist.
The brown marmorated stink bug, a pest
found in 33 states mostly to the east and south,
will likely be found for the first time this year in
Missouri, says Wayne Bailey of the MU Plant
Sciences Division.
Dead specimens were found in Columbia in a
stored travel trailer from the East Coast. Live
stink bugs were found at the end of the growing
season at an Interstate-70 rest stop near
Kansas City, Kans.
The new stink bug destroys fruit, vegetable
and field crops.
However, homeowners may be the first to detect
the pest, Bailey says. It invades homes, as
well as injuring crops.
“A crushed marmorated stink bug can be quite
repugnant,” Bailey said. “The smell makes some
people sick and some have had to vacate their
homes for a few hours.
“The stink bug invasion might make ladybug
home intrusions seem like nothing,” he adds.
Like the ladybug, the stink bug enters homes in
large numbers seeking over-wintering sites.
Stink bugs are winter hardy however they seek
warm place to live.
First found in Pennsylvania in 1998, the pest
has spread slowly. Starting in the Mid-Atlantic
States, stink bugs are now working their way
through the Midwest.
The stink bug probably came in cargo from
China or a neighboring country, Bailey says. It
travels as a stowaway.
The new stink bug has become a problem for
truck farms and orchards. As it moved west it
gained an appetite for corn and soybeans.
The marmorated stink bug joins local stink
bugs that already attack crops. “It is a juicesucking
insect that heads for the developing
fruit or pods,” Bailey said. “It can shrivel all of
the kernels on an ear of corn. Heaviest crop
damage has been on soybeans, a concern to
Missouri farmers.”
All stink bugs are difficult to control with pesticides,
Bailey says. They don’t eat foliage, but
pierce the plant to suck juices.
The new pest has proven more resistant to
control. However, more insecticides are becoming
available for use on the various host crops,
Bailey adds.
Truck farmers have found that insect netting
offers one method of control on fruits and vegetables.
Researchers at the U.S. Department of Agriculture
are working on finding biological controls.
“The most likely control will be from wasps
that attack the eggs,” Bailey says.
In the United States, the pest has not been as
prolific as in China. There it has five or six generations
in a crop season. Here, the pest has one
generation a year. It is not a prolific egg layer.
The adult insect grows to about three-fourths
of an inch in length. The shield-shaped body has
alternating black and white triangles on the
back edge of the wings. White bands are shown
on the pair of long antennae and the hind legs.
The distinguishing feature is a white underbelly.
Common stink bugs have brown or green undersides,
Bailey says.
For crop farmers, the new insect will require
weekly scouting of fields. As pod feeders, stink
bugs can be quite destructive, Bailey adds. Δ