Impact

Penn State Extension aids in identifying high-risk areas for spotted lanternfly

Elizabeth Rosser, Penn State Extension educator and Master Watershed Steward coordinator for Luzerne, Lackawanna and Wyoming counties, is one of the educators helping with a survey to identify high-risk areas for spotted lanternfly. Credit: Vincent Cotrone. All Rights Reserved.

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Identifying potential spotted lanternfly stomping grounds beyond Pennsylvania’s current 14-county quarantine zone is the focus of a survey now being carried out by Penn State Extension.

“We must employ proactive strategies to prevent the spotted lanternfly from gaining a foothold in areas it hasn’t yet reached,” said Dennis Calvin, an entomologist who serves as associate dean and director of special programs in Penn State’s College of Agricultural Sciences. “One way to do that is by identifying and patrolling high-risk areas that might be enticing to this destructive insect.”

Native to Asia, the spotted lanternfly first was discovered in the United States in Berks County in 2014. It since has spread throughout southeastern Pennsylvania and has been found in New Jersey, Virginia, Maryland and Delaware. The pest threatens Pennsylvania's grape, tree fruit, hardwood and nursery industries, which collectively are worth about $18 billion to the state's economy.

Calvin explained that people can spread the insect when it hops a ride on or attaches its eggs to vehicles or items being transported. Therefore, high-volume transportation corridors and sites of major human activity, such as rest stops, restaurants, shopping centers, distribution centers and gas stations are at increased risk for pest establishment.

In addition, places with high densities of Ailanthus altissima, commonly known as tree of heaven, and similar vegetation such as sumac or black walnut, are known to attract the insect.

“The more of these conditions that are met, the greater the likelihood of spotted lanternfly occurrence outside the quarantine zone,” Calvin said.

To identify these areas, Penn State Extension educators are collecting information about the major interstates, heavily traveled highways and railroad rights-of-way as well as the presence of tree of heaven and other host species in their assigned counties.

They are using a mobile app called iMapInvasives, an online, GIS-based data management system developed by NatureServe, a nonprofit conservation science and technology organization, to document the presence or absence of tree of heaven in these high-risk locations.

The information will be used to create a database and mapping system that will enable officials and scientists leading containment efforts to take proactive measures, such as removing host species and conducting patrols of high-risk areas.

It also will position them to react quickly should the pest be sighted beyond the current quarantine zone of Berks, Bucks, Carbon, Chester, Dauphin, Delaware, Lancaster, Lebanon, Lehigh, Monroe, Montgomery, Northampton, Philadelphia and Schuylkill counties.

For the purpose of the survey, Penn State Extension is working outside the quarantine zone to supplement the surveys being conducted by the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture and USDA within and outside the quarantine zone.

“This will be a time-consuming and labor-intensive effort, and we are grateful that our extension educators are willing to go the extra mile to aid the effort,” Calvin said. “They understand the significant threat this pest presents and want to do their part to stop it.”

Heather Leach, spotted lanternfly extension associate, also asked for the public’s assistance, as now is the time when spotted lanternflies mate and lay eggs -- gray-colored, flat clusters that resemble mud -- on a variety of surfaces.

“If you find egg masses on your property from September to April, scrape them off using a plastic card or putty knife, place the masses into a bag or container filled with rubbing alcohol or hand sanitizer, and keep them in the solution permanently,” she said, adding that this is the most effective way to kill eggs, but they also can be smashed or burned.

For more information about how to identify and control spotted lanternfly, how to report an infestation and how to comply with quarantine regulations, visit the Penn State Extension website at https://extension.psu.edu/spotted-lanternfly.

Last Updated September 23, 2019

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