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

Get a FREE Professional Evaluation and solutions for this pest. Go

Leaf-footed Bug Family Coreidae

Size:

Up to 1½ inches

Color:

Light to dark brown

Behavior:

Leaf-footed bugs are so named because the hind legs are flattened and shaped like the edges of leaves. A variety of leaf-footed bugs may migrate into homes seeking a spot to overwinter. In most cases, the number of bugs involved is small, but on occasion, a single home or building may become particularly attractive to these bugs and other overwintering pests. Some species produce an obnoxious strong odor when handled or disturbed. One of the more common leaf-footed bugs that may enter homes is the squash bug, Anasa tristis. Squash bugs overwinter as unmated adults and mate the following spring after they return to the garden. Another, the western conifer seed bug, Leptoglossus occidentalis, feeds on the seeds of several species of pines and Douglas fir and has increasingly become a more common occasional invader pest in structures. Eggs are laid on typical host plants in late spring, and the nymphs feed on needles and young cone scales. They mature into adults by mid-August, and may fly to homes in fall to overwinter.