BOISE — An invasive pest that feeds on a wide range of fruit and vegetable crops and can cause severe damage in apples and peaches has been detected in another Idaho city.
Two years after the brown marmorated stink bug was first detected in Idaho in Nampa, another one of the invasive pests has been found in nearby Boise.
The insect, which is native to Asia, was first detected in this country in Pennsylvania in 1996 and has caused widespread damage in Virginia and other mid-Atlantic states.
“They have a very wide host range and they really can do a number on tree fruit,” said Doug Pfeiffer, an entomologist at Virginia Tech University, which is part of a multi-state project studying ways to control the bug. “They can cause severe injury to apples and peaches....”
ISDA officials believe a handful of the bugs were brought to Nampa in 2012 by a homeowner who had recently moved there from Maryland.
Click here to read more.
Latest from Nursery Management
- [SNEAK PEAK] Leading Women of Horticulture: Louise Schaefer and Susan Tantsits
- The Growth Industry Episode 10: State of the Horticulture Industry
- Tennessee Green Industry Field Day scheduled for June 11
- UTIA and UT Knoxville research teams will develop automated compost monitoring system
- Ken and Deena Altman receive American Floral Endowment Ambassador Award
- [SNEAK PEEK] Leading Women of Horticulture: Becky Thomas
- [SNEAK PEEK] Leading Women of Horticulture: Angela Burke
- [SNEAK PEEK] Leading Women of Horticulture: Alexa Patti