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False chinch bug

Harmful Effects of False chinch bug

Nysius raphanus

A species of False chinch bug

False chinch bug can cause significant agricultural damage by extracting fluids from host plants, leading to wilting, stunted growth, and lower yields. These effects can threaten food supply and economic stability if infestations are severe.

What Type of Pest Is False chinch bug?

Agricultural Pests
Agricultural Pests
Damage Stage
Adults, Nymphs
Host Plants
Mustard, cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower, turnip, radish, beet, tomato, potato, cotton, grain crops, and many others
Host Plants Organs
Leaves, Seeds
Damage Ways
Sucking Plant Fluids
Damage Reason
Feeding
Damage Level
Mild to Severe
Adults and nymphs of false chinch bug cause damage by sucking fluids from various host plants, affecting leaves and seeds. Minor infestations may only cause wilting, but severe cases can result in stunted growth and reduced yields, potentially threatening food supply and economic stability.
More Insects that are Similar to False chinch bug
Black-and-red seed bug
Black-and-red seed bug
Black and fringed with red and gray, some call it the black-and-red seed bug, due to its resemblance to a dying ember.
Redcoat seed bug
Redcoat seed bug
White-crossed seed bug
White-crossed seed bug
The striking white-crossed seed bug boasts a conspicuous red and black pattern along its exoskeleton, an adaptation serving as a visual warning to potential predators. As it matures from nymph to adult, its diet transitions from predominantly plant-based sap to a more varied menu that includes smaller arthropods, demonstrating its role in the ecosystem as both herbivore and predator.
A seed bug
A seed bug
Neortholomus scolopax is a species of seed bugs in the family Lygaeidae. It is found in Central America and North America.
Tropidothorax cruciger
Tropidothorax cruciger
The Tropidothorax cruciger is part of a family known as "seed bugs" due to their dietary habits. Sometimes they can also eat sap. This insect differentiates itself with a stark contrast of red and black. You can see a large, red X pattern if you look at it from an overhead view. 
Oleander seedbug
Oleander seedbug
Caenocoris nerii can reach a length of about 0.30–0.37 in. The female is larger than the male. Bodies are elongated. The basic color of the body is black, with red markings. Two red quadrangular patches are present on the head. Two red markings appear on the shoulders of pronotum and at the inner margins of the hemielytra, which only partially cover the membranous blackish wings. Scutellum and abdomen are completely red.
Large Milkweed Bug
Large Milkweed Bug
The red-orange X-shaped back of the large Milkweed Bug makes it an instant eye-catcher, which is what it wants. This striking pattern acts as a warning to predators that it will be poisonous to eat, as it contains toxins from the milkweed it feeds upon. The large Milkweed Bug mimics the cry of similar-looking bugs, making it even less appealing to predators looking to catch them.
Six-spotted milkweed bug
Six-spotted milkweed bug
Oncopeltus sexmaculatus, the six-spotted milkweed bug, is a species of seed bug in the family Lygaeidae. It is found in the Caribbean Sea, Central America, and North America.
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