Spring is finally here, and with it comes a few unwanted guests you may have already spotted around your home. Stink bugs—brown or green flying insects with a hard back, under an inch in size—are ...
Stink bugs can significantly damage tomatoes. Using their piercing mouth parts, the insects feed on the tomato fruits’ juices—thereby ruining your tomato crop while weakening the plant and potentially ...
Have you ever spotted a bug scuttling across your window and worried it was a dreaded stink bug? These little creatures have a strong preference for warm environments and may be seen coming into homes ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Green stink bug on damaged tomato - Alesja L/Shutterstock Tomato gardeners know the heartbreak of watching healthy fruit turn ...
BOWLING GREEN, Ky. (WBKO/Gray News) - With temperatures cooling down, you may see an increase in bugs trying to get into your home, especially stink bugs. Stink bugs have a habit of finding any space ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. A selective focus shot of a brown marmorated stink bug on a wire fence - Wirestock/Getty Images It is never a pleasant sight to ...
Stink bugs, like the brown marmorated variety seen in this file photo, are found across Kentucky. Here’s how readers say they deal with the unwanted intruders. Courtesy WSU Earlier this month, we ...