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Japanese Beetle Resources

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USDA. FS. Northern Research Station.

Select the non-indigenous forest pest to view maps depicting state and county distribution. Produced by: USDA, FS, Forest Health Protection, and its partners.

United States Department of Agriculture. USDA Climate Hubs.

The Japanese beetle (Popillia japonica Newman) is a highly destructive plant pest of foreign origin. It was first found in the United States in 1916 and has since spread to most states east of, and immediately to the west of, the Mississippi River. It has also spread to some western States, but tough regulations and careful monitoring have prevented its establishment elsewhere. The Japanese beetle has become a serious plant pest and a threat to American agriculture.

Scientists with USDA’s ARS and APHIS have developed an integrated pest management (IPM) program that combines biological, cultural, and chemical strategies. In support of this plan, the Midwest Climate Hub Fellow, Dr. Erica Kistner-Thomas modeled how climate change may impact the distribution and voltinism (generations produced per year) of the Japanese beetle. Model projections indicate increases in temperature would enable northward range expansion across Canada while simultaneously shifting southern range limits in the United States northward. For more on Erica’s work, see: The Potential Global Distribution and Voltinism of the Japanese Beetle (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae) Under Current and Future Climates.

U.S. Government Printing Office. Electronic Code of Federal Regulations.

University of Georgia. Center for Invasive Species and Ecosystem Health.
Provides state, county, point and GIS data. Maps can be downloaded and shared.
Missouri Department of Conservation.

USDAAPHISPPQCPHST. Identification Technology Program.

Morton Arboretum (Illinois).

Minnesota Department of Agriculture.
Colorado State University Extension.
University of Georgia. Center for Invasive Species and Ecosystem Health.
California Department of Food and Agriculture. Plant Health and Pest Prevention Services Division.

USDAAPHIS. Plant Protection and Quarantine.

Colorado Department of Agriculture. Division of Plant Industry.

Kansas State University. Cooperative Extension Service.

Oregon State University. Extension Service.