
Appearance
These bugs are a common garden insect which may damage a wide variety of crops including cotton, peaches and tomatoes, and seeds such as beans, black-eyed peas and sorghum. Like other bugs L. phyllopus suck juices from plants by puncturing them with their sucking mouth parts, making them resistant to ingested pesticides. A toxin is injected into the plant when piercing its skin, causing discoloration and hard spots on fruits. The adult bugs are highly resistant to pesticides; however, they are vulnerable in their bright orange nymph stage. Trap crops can be used to lure them away from desired plants and to encourage predator populations, and in small garden plots handpicking, the use of trap crops, and bug traps baited with methyl -2,4-decadienoate can be effective controls.This bug may enter houses when the weather turns colder and likes to make a home for itself in beds. In a wooded area, the bug will probably be found in homes. It sucks the sap from the cones of various coniferous trees. Pesticides will not get this bug out of a home, so the best means is hand removal. Also, to prevent the bug getting in, one can secure all window screens, attic vents, and other openings.
Acetosyringone is produced by the male leaffooted bug and used in its communication system. Leptoglossus phyllopus emit a foul odor when handled
References:
Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.