From the Georgia Department of Agriculture:

  1. Take a clear picture of the pest.
  2. Kill it.
  3. Report your sighting using our online reporting tool at https://www.gainvasives.org/slf/report/.

Spotted lanternfly egg masses look like smears of mud. Richard Gardner, Bugwood.org

(Pictured: Nymphs (juvenile Spotted Lanternflies) are black with white spots and turn red as they develop. Photos by Lawrence Barringer, Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture, Bugwood.org)

(Pictured: An adult Spotted Lanternfly. Photos by Lawrence Barringer, Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture, Bugwood.org)


For more information about the Spotted Lanternfly and how to identify it, please visit the Georgia Department of Agriculture’s website at https://agr.georgia.gov/spotted-lanternfly.


If you made it this far in the post, please note that while spotted lanternfly can cause considerable damage to grape vines, so it is fair to be concerned, we need not panic. However, we need to work as an industry to monitor, track, and manage this new pest. While any new, invasive species is going to be scary, thankfully there has been a lot of work done in other states that we can adapt to be used in Georgia, so we are not starting from scratch. For additional information on management, please visit Spotted Lanternfly Management in Nurseries, Orchards, Vineyards, and Natural Areas in South Carolina and Georgia

This is definitely a concerning pest, so if you believe you have found spotted lanternfly at your vineyard, please follow the GDA’s recommendations above, but also please alert the grape team. We’re here to help you all!

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