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"Kill her! Kick 'em, beat 'em to death... just get rid of 'em"

The spotted lantern bearer cicada has even made it to “Saturday Night Live”.

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"Kill her! Kick 'em, beat 'em to death... just get rid of 'em"

The spotted lantern bearer cicada has even made it to “Saturday Night Live”. "People tell their kids to crush me," complained comedian Bowen Yang, disguised as the insect, on the US comedy show. "I'm just trying to live my life, find a partner and have 3,000 to 4,000 babies." The comedy about the current insect plague in the Northeast of the United States has a serious background.

The animal with the scientific name "Lycorma delicatula" seems to be omnipresent in the region - in the media, in conversations between friends and acquaintances, but above all in the environment - from forests, meadows, parks and fields to the metropolis of New York. According to scientists at Pennsylvania State University, the insects seem to feel particularly at home there on the sun-warmed outer walls of the high-rise buildings made of glass and concrete.

The Spotted Lantern Bearer Planthopper originally comes from Southeast Asia and China. Its adult wings are partly conspicuously black and partly bright red. It was first sighted in Pennsylvania in 2014 – but it wasn't until this year that the animals spread across 14 states and became a real plague. They don't seem to have made it to Europe yet.

The fully grown insects, which are around two centimeters long, are harmless to humans, but they can cause great damage in nature and agriculture. They pierce through leaves and stems, suck out the plants and have already caused millions of dollars in damage.

"The spotted planthopper is a threat to many fruit plants and trees," according to the US Department of Agriculture. "If we allow it to spread across the US, this plague could seriously damage wine, fruit and lumber production."

To combat the insects, which tend to hop rather than fly, the responsible authorities in many US states have launched an unusual appeal to the population: Please step on them! "Kill her! Kick 'em, beat 'em to death...just get rid of 'em,” says the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture, for example. The administration of Central Park in New York also asks visitors to step on the animals - and countless people do so. The park and many sidewalks in the metropolis are full of crushed cicadas in some places.

For some people, killing Lanternhopper Planthoppers has become something of a hobby, and they proudly report their successes. There is even an app called "Squishr" where you can compete with other players. Other people generally do not want to kill animals, even if they are potentially harmful insects.

The "Dilemma of the Spotted Lantern Bearer Cicada" is what the "New York Magazine" calls it: "Tread or not tread?"

With the onset of frost, the insects will gradually disappear from the cityscape of the metropolis of New York and the affected states in the coming weeks - but they have already laid their eggs and they can survive the winter. Young animals can hatch in the spring. Then experts fear, above all, a further spread towards the west of the USA - for example in the wine-growing regions of California.

Scientists know that footsteps alone won't solve the problem - but there aren't many other options just yet, mainly because the insect damages so many different plants and lays its numerous eggs in so many different places.

"If we don't stop it, it will spread," Pennsylvania State University researcher Julie Urban told CNN. “Long-term research-based solutions are on the way. But we need help buying time.”

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