Climate change is bringing new insect pests into our gardens. A change in climate means that areas that were once ...
Kamloops city council is holding a closed council meeting this week to consider putting aside 200,000 to deal with invasive ...
Residents in Pasco recently received a treatment form from the Washington State Department of Agriculture (WSDA) seeking consent to spray pesticides. The effort aims to stop the ...
State experts say 100% of the yards in the treatment zone must be sprayed by a licensed applicator with the insecticide Acelepryn to eradicate larvae and prevent the beetles from setting up show here ...
“The presence of Japanese beetles has a direct economic effect—not just on ... there’s still a long way to go.” Property owners in the treatment zones are encouraged to submit consent forms annually ...
“If property owners don’t allow treatment, the beetle will establish ... It also poses no risk to mammals, birds or fish. Japanese beetles don’t bite or spread diseases to people, but ...
Japanese beetles don’t bite or spread disease to ... s multi-year eradication plan includes mass trapping, insecticide treatment, and establishing a quarantine that restricts the movement ...
Kosuke Okahara for The New York Times Supported by By Clay Risen One afternoon in February 1891, a Japanese chemist named Jokichi Takamine arrived by train in Peoria, Ill. He was there at the ...
Efforts to knock down invasive Japanese beetle in Vancouver appear to be working The beetles are established in eastern provinces and were first spotted in B.C. in 2017, in Vancouver's False Creek ...