Chattanooga Times Free Press

Summer lubbers return to Georgia

-

ATHENS, Ga. — One of Georgia’s most unusual bugs is crawling again — the big grasshoppe­r known as the lubber.

They can reach up to 3 inches in length, The Athens Banner-Herald reported. They move so slowly they’re quite easy to catch by hand.

Their distinctiv­e red and black markings (sometimes also pink, purple and yellow) also make them hard to confuse with any other insect.

Their population­s are small and localized, said Paul Guillebeau, a professor of entomology at the University of Georgia.

People have reported them in their yards in Athens neighborho­ods such as Five Points and Normaltown.

But they can also be found across the Southeast, said Nancy Hinkle, a UGA entomologi­st.

They may for some reason like cemeteries, said Guillebeau, who remembers seeing them in cemeteries growing up near Cedartown, and others have reported seeing them in Oconee Hill cemetery.

Guillebeau and his brother collected some, he recalled.

“We thought they would be a great fish bait. But they stunk. Fish would not eat them,” he said.

As with many other brightly colored insects, their brilliant color is a warning to predators that they don’t taste good, Guillebeau explained.

You can get an idea of that by picking one up; they’ll emit a foamy substance and

“We thought they would be a great fish bait. But they stunk. Fish would not eat them.” — PAUL GUILLEBEAU, PROFESSOR OF ENTOMOLOGY AT THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA

a foul-smelling vapor. It’s not harmful to people, but it’s a good warning for bugeating creatures they won’t like it if they swallow one.

That’s how they can get away with being as slow-moving as they are. Their slow movement makes it hard for them to spread; one would probably go no further than 100 yards in the summertime, and is the reason they’re localized, Guillebeau said.

Lubbers don’t seem to be a serious garden pest, said entomologi­sts.

But gardeners have told Guillebeau that the big grasshoppe­rs chowed down on their lilies.

There are several species of lubber, including the locally Eastern and Southeaste­rn Lubbers.

It takes a lot of insecticid­e to kill a lubber once it gets fullgrown, Guillebeau said.

The proper way to deal with them is mechanical.

“The best thing is to grab them and squash them,” Hinkle said.

 ?? ATHENS ONLINE PHOTO BY LEE SHEARER ?? The lubber can reach up to 3 inches in length and moves so slowly they’re quite easy to catch by hand and can be found across the Southeast, said University of Georgia entomologi­st Nancy Hinkle.
ATHENS ONLINE PHOTO BY LEE SHEARER The lubber can reach up to 3 inches in length and moves so slowly they’re quite easy to catch by hand and can be found across the Southeast, said University of Georgia entomologi­st Nancy Hinkle.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States