The News (New Glasgow)

Concerns grow over lady beetle

- BY AARON BESWICK

Darrell Aikens will not be surprised if you call him to report an invasion of Asian lady beetles in your home.

“Probably five calls a day for the past month,” said the owner of Aikens Pest Control Ltd. in Stellarton. “This has been going on for several years but it’s been getting progressiv­ely worse.”

Introduced from Asia to control aphids on pecans and apples by the United States Department of Agricultur­e through the mid-part of the 20th century, the Asian lady beetle has found North America to its liking. And over recent years it has been showing up in people’s homes in this province.

There is often desperatio­n in the voices of the people calling Aikens. The news he has for them is mixed.

“Doing a treatment right now would be a waste of money and I’m not going to take people’s money for doing something that won’t work,” said Aikens.

The good news is that the beetles aren’t breeding or feeding in your walls.

“Unless you have aphids in your walls, they’re not going to stick around,” said Paul Manning, an entomologi­st at Dalhousie University’s Agricultur­e Campus.

And you don’t have aphids in your walls — they live outside, sucking the sap from the leaves and grass in your yard.

As the weather has warmed up, the beetles crawl out from around window frames and light fixtures and any other gaps on the interior of your house.

It isn’t their intention to wreck whatever peace and order you’ve strived to create in your home. It’s actually that they want outside.

Within a few weeks the interior infestatio­n should be over once you have crushed, drowned or vacuumed up all the little bugs that have stuck around.

Outside, explained Manning, they will feed and lay eggs. Those eggs will become larvae and then adults that feed quite happily on sap-sucking aphids.

It’s when you see them amassing on the exterior walls of your house in the fall that Aikens recommends calling him.

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