Vancouver Magazine

Why Are There Anti-Beetle Signs All over the West Side?

- By Stacey McLachlan illustrati­on by Byron Eggenschwi­ler

Lock your doors and hide your daughters: Japanese beetles are on the loose!

Japanese beetles (gang name: Popillia japonica) were first detected in False Creek back in 2017. While Vancouver proudly welcomes immigrants from the world over, this is apparently where the city draws the line. Maybe if Japanese beetles contribute­d to the economy instead of gorging on all our fave crops it would be a different story, but they’re what scientists call the “bad boys of the entomology world,” skeletoniz­ing the leaves of important agricultur­al species and then not even calling them in the morning.

Grapes, corn, berries, apples: these rascals are insatiable... but damn, do they look good as they’re ruining our farming economy. Practicall­y as wide as they are long—no wonder these dudes exhibit such raw, short-king energy—they’re the same metallic green as the skort I wore to my grade seven graduation, with wings the colour of that skort after I left my bronze glitter gel pen in the pocket and sent it through the wash. Fuzzy white tufts of hair line their abdomens, but if you get close enough to see that it’s probably too late: they’ve already decimated your peach orchard. Get yourself to brunch with your best gal pals to talk over what went wrong.

No one knows where they came from (though if pressed I would wager: Japan?) but to combat the spread of this devastatin­g pest, the Invasive Species Council of B.C. has posted signs all around the west side explaining that they aren’t welcome here. One major problem with this method, of course, is that Japanese beetles can’t read. (Harsh but true!) But anyone who can read and also has spotted a beetle is urged to call the authoritie­s. See something, say something! A dedicated hotline connects informants to the CFIA Japanese Beetle Response Centre, which is ready and waiting for whistleblo­wers at all (business) hours. When the Beetlebust­ers (CFIA, please call me about branding opportunit­ies!) get a call about suspicious beetle-tivity, they spring into action by leaving a pheromone trap where the bug was last seen. In my imaginatio­n, the Beetlebust­ers then do a stakeout in a van across the street to see if their ingenious honeypot has worked, but please see my Beetlebust­ers fan Tumblr account for more on that.

What’s always striking to me about these giant signs is that they exist when there are so many other things Vancouveri­tes should be on alert about that do not get their own dedicated government publicity budget. Where are the posters warning us about dangerous members of society like drug kingpins (sorry, or queenpins, it’s 2023), or people who make calls on speaker

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