Nuisance
Pests > Boxelder Bug
Pest: Boxelder Bug (Boisea trivittatus (Say))
Order: Hemiptera
Family: Rhopalidae
Host Plants:
Primarily found on boxelder (Acer negundo) but also on
silver maple (A. saccharinum ) (Johnson and Lyon).
Description:
These "bugs" are black in color with an orange banding
occurring around the margins of the sclerotized portion of their
hemelytra (front wings). They are approximately 1/2" in length
as adults. This pest uses its piercing-sucking mouth parts to feed
on foliage in the spring which can cause some distortion to the
newly emerging foliage but they primarily feed on the seeds. In
the late summer and early fall, however, adult boxelder bugs will
congregate, sometimes by the thousands, on the sides of buildings
which they later try to enter in search of a protected over-wintering
site. They primarily are a nuisance pest in the fall, within homes,
and are of little concern while on the host plant.
Life Cycle:
Adults emerge from over-wintering sites and lay eggs on, or
near, the host in late April into early May. The first instars feed
on fallen seeds but later migrate up into the female boxelder tree
and feed on newly forming seeds and leaves. There is one generation
per year (Johnson and Lyon).
Management Strategies:
Injury to the host plant is of little or no concern. However,
the clustering on, and entering into, homes is quite problematic
and disturbing for many home-owners. Homes with female host trees
within close proximity should have all vents, attic louvers, screens,
etc. in good repair to prevent entry. Repeated infestations, year
after year, often leads to the removal of the host tree.
Images:
| 
An adult boxelder bug (R. Childs)

Seeds and foliage of the female boxelder
tree. (R. Childs) |
Nuisance
pests index:
Boxelder Bug
Giant Europeon Hornet
House Invaders 
Yellow Jackets 
Questions
about downloading files followed by the
symbol? Click
here for more info.
|