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  2. Japanese beetle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_beetle

    The first Japanese beetle found in Canada was inadvertently brought by tourists to Yarmouth, Nova Scotia, by ferry from Maine in 1939. During the same year, three additional adults were captured at Yarmouth and three at Lacolle in southern Quebec. [7] Japanese beetles have been found on the islands of the Azores since the 1970s. [8]

  3. Maladera formosae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maladera_formosae

    Maladera formosae, commonly known as the Asiatic garden beetle and formerly known as Maladera castanea, is a species of beetle in the family Scarabaeidae.It is native to Japan, China, South Korea, North Korea, and Russia but was introduced to North America in the 1920s where it is considered a pest of turfs, gardens, and crop fields.

  4. Insects in Japanese culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insects_in_Japanese_culture

    Japanese rhinoceros beetles, called カブトムシ, kabutomushi meaning "samurai helmet insect" is popular in beetle wrestling. [ 16 ] Beetle wrestling, or more broadly referred to as bugfighting, [ 14 ] is a form of competition whereby two beetles are provoked in order to try to flip over or toss its opponent, [ 14 ] or haul its opponent out ...

  5. Japanese beetles destroying your SC garden, landscaping? Here ...

    www.aol.com/japanese-beetles-destroying-sc...

    The Almanac says, “Four-o’clocks (Mirabilis) and larkspur (Delphinium) are said to act as decoys by attracting rose-loving Japanese beetles to eat their poisonous leaves, but they do not kill ...

  6. Are Japanese beetles eating up your yard? This Kentucky bug ...

    www.aol.com/news/japanese-beetles-eating-yard...

    The invasive Japanese beetle is the most devastating plant pest in the eastern United States. You likely already have everything you need to get rid of them. Here’s how.

  7. Adult Japanese beetles lay their eggs in summer in turf grass, preferably lower-cut, irrigated lawns. Once those eggs hatch, the larvae or white grubs, feed on the roots of grass through the rest ...

  8. Regimbartia attenuata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regimbartia_attenuata

    Regimbartia attenuata, commonly known as Japanese water scavenger beetle, is a species of water scavenger beetle [1] widely distributed in the Old World, [2] from northern Australia and Japan westward to the countries of Arabian Peninsula, including Oman and Yemen. It is the only species of the genus occurring in the Arabian Peninsula.

  9. Japanese beetles destroying your SC garden, landscaping? Here ...

    www.aol.com/japanese-beetles-destroying-sc...

    The Almanac says, “Four-o’clocks (Mirabilis) and larkspur (Delphinium) are said to act as decoys by attracting rose-loving Japanese beetles to eat their poisonous leaves, but they do not kill ...