Spotted Lanternfly Headquarters

Simplifying Tree-Care Solutions

Against SLF

Protecting your property

Brought to you by Mauget’s Dinocide!

Proven Science

Studies, Reports, White papers

Identifying Spotted Lanternfly's

A bug’s a bug, right? How do I tell what a Spotted Lanternfly insect looks like?

The spotted lanternfly adult is 1” long and 1/2” wide at rest. The forewings are grey with black spots, and the hind wings are red with black spots. The head and legs are black, and the abdomen is yellow with broad black bands. Immature stages are small, round, and black with white spots and develop red patches as they grow.

It’s a hitchhiking sucker.

The spotted lanternfly is a very distinct insect at both the nymph and adult phases. The egg masses can be hard to spot, making it easy to transport them on vehicles and other outdoor items.

Therefore, the public should inspect their vehicles and anything they may be transporting, including trailers, stone, metal, or anything that has spent time outdoors and remove and destroy any egg masses attached.

Tell Tale Signs

The spotted lanternfly feeds on the trees to reproduce. Egg masses will be laid on the trunk, branches, and limbs of medium to large trees, often in the upper reaches of the canopy. In springtime, nymphs will hatch and move off the trees and search for new hosts, including several crops, including grapes, apples, and peaches.

Susceptible tree species – such as the tree of heaven, walnut, and willow – might develop weeping wounds, leaving a greyish or black trail along the trunk. The spotted lanternfly feeds through the bark using a piercing-sucking mouthpart tapped into the plant like a straw. When it feeds, it excretes honeydew or sugary water on and around its feeding site. This encourages the growth of black sooty mold, which is not harmful to humans but can damage plants and make outside recreation areas unusable. This sap will attract other insects to feed, notably wasps and ants.

Branch dieback, wilting and plant death is a common symptom of heavily spotted lanternfly feedings.

In late fall, adults will lay egg masses on host trees and nearby smooth surfaces like stone, outdoor furniture, vehicles, and structures. Newly laid egg masses have a grey mud-like covering. Egg masses that have not been covered all the way, are close to hatching, or have already hatched will have a segmented look.

Why is everyone so worried about this bug?

This pest could seriously impact the grape, orchard, hardwood, and nursery and landscape industries if allowed to spread. The insect can also damage high-value ornamentals in home landscapes and can affect the quality of life for residents. Due to quarantines in other states, interstate commerce will be impacted if the pest is transported out of a quarantine area.

Trees and plants that have been known to be affected are:
  • Apples
  • Plums
  • Hops
  • Cherries
  • Plums
  • Hops
  • Cherries
  • Grapes
  • Peaches
  • Nectarines
  • Apricots
  • Figs
  • Raspberries
  • Almonds
  • Pine Trees
  • Oak Trees
  • Walnut Trees
  • Poplar Trees
  • Willow Trees
  • Maple Trees
  • Sycamore Trees
  • Rose bushes
  • Hydrangea

The Solution to Spotted Lanternfly

Mauget’s newest tree injection insecticide product DINOCIDE Hp is a CAUTION labeled insecticide containing 12% Dinotefuran in high volume one liter and 500 mL bottles as Ready-to-Use chemistry for application with re-loadable tree injection equipment (such as the ChemJet, QuikJet or Tree IV, etc.) . Dinotefuran, its active ingredient is a translaminar that can pass from a tree’s xylem (the layer in a tree that circulates water from the roots) to its phloem (the tree layer nearest the bark which transports sugars from the plant’s leaves). This capability makes DINOCIDE uniquely effective against pests like certain boring insects that do their damage in the phloem layer. Dinocide is for use in forests, parks, and ornamental trees. DINOCIDE can yield results in as little as three (3) days.