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ninny423 t1_j1hug8o wrote

I hope so! I hate these things.

33

LossyP t1_j1hulla wrote

The enemy of my enemy is my friend

377

PurpleSailor t1_j1hvvu6 wrote

Down to 0Ā° here so die Lantern Fly's, die!

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grand_speckle t1_j1hwyec wrote

I think itā€™s a similar phenomenon with ticks too! though if I recall it needs to be under 15 for a few days at least. Hell if ticks and lantern flies are dying Iā€™m all for this weather truthfully lol. Time to bundle up

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AbazabaYouMyOnlyFren t1_j1i2258 wrote

Good, fuck those bugs.

They're really quite beautiful and weird looking but not if they're killing all the damn trees.

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EbolaFred t1_j1i3pfg wrote

Killing of trees aside, why they gotta leap on me when I least expect it? That freaks a motherfucker out. And it's not like they can drink my blood or sting me for fun. So why?

Lantern flies: stop jumping on me, learn to eat poison ivy and lawn weeds, and we can be happy together.

207

gordonv t1_j1i7cok wrote

It's a shame these things are harmful to trees, creepy, and so numerous.

They're quite beautiful in their own way.

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mykepagan t1_j1ibzcw wrote

It was 6F in my neighborhood for about 8 hours last night. Every branch and shrub is at ambient temp except for the one by my dryer vent :-)

Die, lanternflies, die!

15

Wolfir t1_j1ighu5 wrote

in my experience, don't rely on the cold to kill invertebrates

you're right, maybe this deep freeze will kill some lanternflies and they'll be a lesser problem this coming season

but when it comes to ticks . . . I just think a deep freeze might slow them down a bit, but I don't think they'll be dead

It only takes one lukewarm weekend for the ticks to wake up again

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DrMaxwellEdison t1_j1ihw1c wrote

Forecast: unlikely. It's climbing back to 16 here in Hunterdon today, low 12 tonight, then slowly climbing throughout the week.

One can dream, but these bugs have all survived before, and we'll see them again in the spring, I'm sure.

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ElectricalAd5367 t1_j1ii45n wrote

Letā€™s hope, never had a bug fly into me so much as they doā€¦ šŸ‘ŽšŸ¼

8

asian_identifier t1_j1it1fs wrote

They'll just travel back up from the south along with the mosquitoes

4

jollyjam1 t1_j1ixa8l wrote

I saw one limping along the other day and audibly asked it how it was still alive before proceeding to step on it.

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Meem-Thief t1_j1jmb79 wrote

It says right there: itā€™ll kill the bugs but not the eggs, trees are not gonna be getting that cold so the eggs will survive, if the eggs couldnā€™t survive a few days in winter these bugs wouldā€™ve been extinct millennia ago

3

Chose_a_usersname t1_j1k3m8q wrote

I have been keeping my lantern fly eggs under a heat lamp so they will be safe

5

Sendtitpics215 t1_j1k72i5 wrote

I vibe hard with both of these comments.

Everyone is so crazy ā€œKILL THEMā€ and you two are just like ā€œhey man, chill out letā€™s work something outā€ and ā€œyou know if they do die thatā€™s fine, I like evergreens šŸŒ² ā€œ

3

6gc_4dad t1_j1odqed wrote

Currently 22 feels like 12. Letā€™s ride

1

_dumbunny t1_j1rfaxh wrote

Lanternfly excrement. Apparently it's sweet because I would see yellowjackets following them closely and defending them by trying to keep me away as I closed in for a kill. Also, I've read that honeybees are attracted to it to and then produce dark or even black honey.

1