Amphipod Black Vine Weevil
Box Elder Bug Caddisfly
Centipede Clover Mite
Cricket Dobsonfly
Earwig Elm Leaf Beetle
Firebrat Ground Beetle
Horntail House Centipede
Jerusalem Cricket Ladybug
Leaf-footed Bug Mayfly
Millipede Mole Cricket
Pillbug Plaster Beetle
Psocid Silverfish
Slug & Snail Sowbug
Springtail Stink Bug
Stonefly Strawberry Root Weevil

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Elm Leaf Beetle Pyrrhalta luteola

Size:

About 1/4-inch in length.

Color:

Medium green with a dark stripe on each wing cover.

Behavior:

Elm leaf beetles infest elm trees where the larvae feed upon the trees leaves. The larvae eat between the leaf veins, leaving the leaf with a "skeletonized" appearance. During late summer, the larvae fall off the tree into the leaf litter underneath to pupate. The adults emerge and search for a place to overwinter. They are attracted to the warmth emitted by nearby buildings and will crawl into cracks and holes in the buildings' exterior walls. They crawl as far back as they can into wall voids and attics. During warm winter days, some beetles may make their way into the interior of the building. Beetles, therefore, may be seen throughout the winter and spring.