Community Corner
Stink Bugs On The Move And Inside Your House
These creepy critters are looking for a warm place to spend the winter.

Theyβre ugly, theyβre creepy, and theyβre breaking into your house any way they can.
Stink bugs.
As Octoberβs nighttime temperatures fall off their summer highs, the prehistoric-looking pest that was first discovered in the U.S. in the late 1990s is on the move, looking for warm places to spend the winter.
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And mainly, thatβs inside your house.
βTheyβre just so gross,ββ said horticulturalist Diane Larson, of the Rutgers Cooperative Extension of Monmouth County. βTheyβre ugly, but theyβre harmless.ββ
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Larson said this is the time of year that the brown marmorated stink bug looks for warmer places for the winter. They are one of the few insects that spend the winter as adults, not larvae, and theyβre particularly good at finding ways inside your house, Larsen said.
βThey will find any little crack thatβs available,ββ Larson said.
Once inside, however, they really donβt do much. Larson said the stink bug causes no harm, does not nest or reproduce once inside, and eats nothing. If crushed, however, the bug emits a foul odorβhence its name.
βThey just kind of shut down,β Larson said. βThey slow down and they donβt really move and they donβt eat. They get moving again in the heat.β
While a nuisance to homeowners, the stink bug is becoming an economic pest to farmers as the bugs eat a wide variety of crops.
βNo other pest we know of has that broad a range of what it will feed on,β Dean Polk, coordinator of Rutgersβ fruit Integrated Pest Management program, has said.
On the bright side, reports of stink bug infestation this year are lower than they have been in three years. Researchers donβt know why, Larson said.
In the U.S., stink bugs are concentrated mostly in the Mid-Atlantic states, according to a recent national survey. But the invasive species has now spread to 38 states, including California and Oregon, according to USDA-funded research.
The brown marmorated stink bug is native to Asia and was first discovered in the U.S. in 1996.
The best homeownerβs defense against stink bugs is a good offense, according to literature from the Rutgers Cooperative extension. A little caulk around windows and doors can go a long way to keeping out the little critters. Removing window air conditioning units is a must, Larson said.
The bugs donβt sting, so removal by hand is an option once sighted inside the house. The business end of a vacuum also is effective, Larson said.
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