wpe5.jpg (2127 bytes)U.P. TREE  IDENTIFICATION  KEY
from Michigan State University Extension

FOREST HEALTH - HARDWOOD SUCKING INSECTS

This group is named because its insects have sucking mouth parts and feed on plant fluids.  A huge number of species are included, but few cause actual death to trees.  Their main offense is robbing the tree of its food and water.  This, of course, can eventually affect growth and health, but most damage is minor.  They are also known to spread tree diseases and sometimes the slits they make in branches weaken the branch enough that it dies or snaps off. Evidence of their activity can also appear as defoliation. True bugs are most common order (Hemiptera)

Aphids, Boxelder Bugs, Cicadas, Galls, Lacebugs, Scales

 

Aphids or plant lice (mostly order Hemiptera): many species, some cultivated by ants for their honeydew, honeydew on willows also attracts bees (especially in the late fall), woolly aphids have conspicuous tufts of cottony masses, aphids insert mouthparts into living plant tissue and suck out the juices, many species are colonial
Hosts: most trees, common in aspen and willows
   

 

Boxelder Bugs (Boisea trivittata, Hemiptera order): not much of a pest on trees but can be a human nuisance, normally feed on boxelder seeds, removing female boxelder trees eliminated food source

Hosts: mostly boxelder, sometimes other maples or ashes
  
adult (left), nymph (right)

 

Cicadas (Magicicada septendecim = periodical cicada): periodically cause mechanical damage to twigs of young hardwoods, at times very numerous, colorful adults, distinctive nymph cases left on many surfaces

Hosts: many hardwoods
 

 

Galls: variety of wasps, flies, aphids, and mites, they “sting” a twig or leaf and the swollen, cancer-like reaction provides shelter and food for the insect’s young

Hosts: many hardwoods and other plants, but particularly ash, oak, poplars, and willows

       
ash flower gall-left 2, oak gall-middle, willow gall-right

 

Lace bugs (bug order, Corythucha spp., others): often whitish patches on upper leaf surface, generally harmless, minor damage, feed on leaf undersides

Hosts: many hardwoods but especially yellow birch, basswood, maples, ironwood, oaks, and willows
  

 

Scale insects (mostly true bugs-Hemiptera order): many species, small insects that form hard or soft shells, or sometimes cottony tufts on twigs or leaves, some species are exotics (beech bark disease involves a scale insect, first image)

Hosts: nearly all species
 
    
 

Image Citations
Boxelder Bug (1), adult - William M. Ciesla, Forest Health Management International, Bugwood.org
Boxelder Bug (2), nymph - Whitney Cranshaw, Colorado State University, Bugwood.org
Cicada (1) - John H. Ghent, USDA Forest Service, Bugwood.org
Cicada (2) - Tim Tigner, Virginia Department of Forestry, Bugwood.org
Lace Bug, Cherry (1) - USDA Forest Service Archive, USDA Forest Service, Bugwood.org
Lace Bug, Birch, (2) - Jim Baker, North Carolina State University, Bugwood.org
All others - Bill Cook, Michigan State University Extension


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This site created and maintained by Bill Cook, MSU Extension Forester for the Upper Peninsula of Michigan.   Editing and modification is ongoing.  Submit suggestions, questions, and corrections to cookwi@msu.edu or call 906-786-1575.