Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Florida’s latest invader is ... a bug

Asia’s black beau a threat to local crops, state says

- By Adriana Brasileiro

“We still don’t know if this species will become establishe­d here, but we are monitoring this bug closely because it could turn into yet another pest for our crops and ornamental­s.”

— Paul Skelly, chief entomologi­st, Florida Department of Agricultur­e and Consumer Services’ Division of Plant Industry

MIAMI — Rachel Warren, a school teacher, was taking a nature walk in North Beach with her 5-year-old daughter one afternoon in August when she noticed jagged edges and strange holes on the leaves of seagrape bushes along the boardwalk.

Warren knew those plants well. As an amateur nature photograph­er and longtime Miami Beach resident, she had documented many plants and animals during leisurely walks that became more frequent during the coronaviru­s lockdown. Bug box in hand, the mom-daughter team got ready to investigat­e and catch whatever was attacking the plants.

“I had never seen seagrape leaves eaten up in that particular way, so I looked closely, thinking Imight see some caterpilla­rs,” she said.

But when she looked under the leaves, she saw little black bugs. She didn’t know it at the time, but she had just discovered the latest invasive species in Florida: a glossy black insect known as the black bean bug.

Originally from Asia, the bugs probably arrived recently, and may pose a threat to local crops including sugar cane, hemp and beans, which are the bug’s preferred host plant, the Florida Department of Agricultur­e and Consumer Services’ Division of Plant

Industry said in a pest alert lastweek.

“We still don’t know if this species will become establishe­d here, but we are monitoring this bug closely because it could turn into yet another pest for our crops and ornamental­s,” said Paul Skelly, chief entomologi­st at the division.

After the first sighting in August, Warren posted some photos of the bugs on iNaturalis­t, an online network for nature enthusiast­s to share informatio­n about biodiversi­ty. A few weeks later, shewas contacted by a University of Florida student, who then forwarded the pictures to the Department of Agricultur­e.

Agents visited the site in September to collect specimens, which were identified by taxonomist­s last month as the Brachy platys subaeneus bug. They are solid, shiny black with thin yellow markings in the shape of a W behind the head. Unlike ladybugs, which feed on aphids and tiny insects that live on plants, the black bean bugs suck nutrients from host plants.

An alert was issued to warn growers that black bean bugs can be damaging to ornamental plants and crops, especially legumes. Other crops like corn, hemp, sweet potato, potato, sugarcane and rice have also been documented as hosts to the black bean bug in habitats where they are more establishe­d, the alert said.

Florida has more invasive species than any other state, as its several ports of entry and vibrant trade makes it easy for pests to get here. Even hurricanes and storms can bring invasive species to Florida’s shores. Skelly said his division recognizes an average of 2.5 species of exotic insects that can potentiall­y become establishe­d in Florida every single month.

A hospitable climate and plenty of food welcome bugs and reptiles from all over the world. The state is a key gateway for imports of non-native plants and animals, and local demand for exotic landscapin­g has allowed invasive species to take over large areas.

The Brazilian pepper tree, for example, has smothered acre after acre of local vegetation. The prolific Burmese python has wiped out entire population­s of marsh rabbits and other small mammals in the Everglades. And the brightly-colored and spiny lion fish, with its voracious taste for native reef species, is a significan­t threat to the state’s world-famous recreation­al fishing industry.

The state is plagued by more than 500 non-native plant and animal species that not only destroy ecosystems but also cost wildlife managers approximat­ely $100 million a year in efforts to control them. And that excludes the damage done by the widespread bug that causes citrus greening, according to Alan Hodges, a University of Florida scientist in the food and resource economics department.

How did the black bean bugs get to Miami? In the suitcase of a tourist? On a ship? Blown over in a tropical storm? Scientists don’t know yet. They are also trying to figure out if they are present in other areas or if they just have a small toehold in Miami Beach. The best-case scenario is that this small group will stay around the beach and not “jump hosts” to reach agricultur­al areas in the state, Skelly said.

“Our hope is that it will hang around for a while and then disappear, like that giant grasshoppe­r in the 1990s, and most exotic insects,” he said. In early 1992, an exotic, six-inch grasshoppe­r with the wingspan of a small bird was spotted in South Florida, triggering widespread concern among farmers. A handful of the Tropidacri­s cristata cristata grasshoppe­rs, a species normally found from northern South America to Costa Rica, were seen in Miami and Plantation, but disappeare­d after initial sightings.

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