WILSONVILLE, OREGON -- June 18, 2013 -- A bumblebee dies after falling off a Landen tree at Town Loop Shopping Center parking lot. An estimated 25,000 bumblebees were found dead beginning Saturday, ...
As a neocotinoid insecticide, dinotefuran presents an alarming hazard to bees and other pollinators. Like other neonicotinoids, it is systemic and can indiscriminately poison any insects feeding on ...
The Environmental Protection Agency said today it has granted an emergency exemption allowing orchards in Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Virginia and West Virginia to ...
Mix your own chemical solution at home using this calculation, then drench your trees to halt emerald ash borer infestations in your backyard.
HAGERSTOWN, Md. (AP) -- Fruit growers in seven Eastern states have a new weapon for fighting the brown marmorated stink bug. The Environmental Protection Agency said Thursday it has granted an ...
There is some hope in sight for Virginia fruit growers as the peak of stink bug season approaches: temporary approval of a highly toxic insecticide. The Environmental Protection Agency has approved ...
Officials in the Oregon Department of Agriculture have confirmed the insecticide Safari caused the deaths of 25,000 bumblebees in Wilsonville this week. [Update: Insecticide sprayed to control aphids, ...
Seen a spotted lanternfly in Ohio? Well, they're invasive. More on their life cycle, eggs, size, how to kill them and what to do if you see them.
Spotted lanternflies will soon begin laying eggs that hatch in spring. Now is the time to kill their egg masses. Here's how to get rid of them.
Preliminary findings of a Penn State-led study at Blue Marsh Lake did not show a fungi-based biopesticide to be the game-changer in the fight against the spotted lanternfly that some had hoped. The ...
New research conducted on spotted lanternflies may provide helpful insights on preventing the population of invasive insects in Pennsylvania from growing even bigger. Scientists from Penn State found ...
They live in the cracks and crevices of beds and crawl out a night to suck blood by detecting our body heat and carbon dioxide. Now the much loathed bed bug is threatening to become even more of a ...