Lovebugs Are Bad!

Here's an interesting article I found on Lovebugs...

"During the mating process, the male lovebug attaches to the female lovebug and only disengages during the daytime while resting on vegetation never during flight or at night...Successful mating takes as much as 12 hours, and the female lovebug dies within 86 hours of laying eggs."

OMG!!! 12 hours of mating and only stopping to rest?!?! :rolleyes1

http://pestalert.ifas.ufl.edu/lovebug.htm
 
We are becoming so scientific here on the DIS! Good for us - I love threads like this! No grumpiness, just a general non-love of love bugs! :thumbsup2
 
HugsForEeyore said:
Do you know the name of these wipes? I drove through a swarm back in May, and my car still has lots of bug goo embedded in it, it WILL not come off. :mad: And the car was new and shiny at the time, too. And I am driving down next week, too. Probably have to pay for a detailing when I get back. I doubt I have time to buy a nose protector thing for my car, and those things are very expensive. :( I hate love bugs. If you drive into a swarm, they CAN smear all over your entire windshield, and block you vision! They can be dangerous, unfortunately. :(


I don't remember - I can check when I get home. They were located in the car wash / detail aisles and were right next to the RainX.
 

I am going next May! One of the two months that these little creeps will be flying around. I just HAD to pick May, didn't I. :rotfl2:
Oh well. I guess I'll deal. Are they really bad in the parks? Or just in other areas?
 
If you drive at night, they are not bad. If you drive during the day and you get a bunch of splatters on your windshield, don't try to wash them off while driving. They will smear and you won't be able to see. Pull into a gas station and scrub them off.

As others have said, they are only here for a short while. It will not be quite as warm the next couple of days. That may help some.
 
I've only read through the first 2 pages so I'm not sure if this has been asked yet. How long is there seasona and when will they be gone. We will be there at the end of Oct. and I'm really hoping they are long gone. I'm not worried about my car cause we are flying, but I definately do not want to be covered in them either!
 
So true they seem worse right now then in a long time. I live in Orlando, had to drive down to Fort Lauderdale on Monday. I had to stop at each Service Center to wash the bugs off the windshield. As there were so many it didn't take long before the windshield was so covered made it very difficult to see out. Drove back to Orlando today and again same thing.

I had washed the car before going down on Monday, washed it again tonight once home. I used the turnpike so if traveling that way stop at the service centers, use the windshield washer, just be ready to wait in a long line. At least each of my stops there were around 20 cars in line. You can also try using the truck side washer but even there trucks/cars were lined up waiting.

Annoying bugs, and mess up the car quickly!!!!!!
 
Last time we were there the love bugs were out in full force. The car rental place could have cared less ;) They were REALLY bad all over the front of our rental house - we had to sweep every day just so that we could walk in without tracking them into the house. They like to ride in on stuff, too.

BUT - I'm a totally squeamish bug phobic person and they're quite small and not that offensive. Not at all like a roach, for example. But not gnat small either. Aside from seeing them at the house every day, we seldom saw them around - occasionally flying in the air while we drove, but it was usually pretty early in the morning so we avoided them, I guess.

Animal Kingdom was bad - but the rest of the parks, unless you were near a bunch of bushes, you don't really see them much. Or maybe it's that in perspective, they're not that important? :)
 
We just got home a few hours ago and all I can tell you is the bugs were really really bad. They are in "clouds" they were out all day.Thye don't actually fly they kind of float about aimelessly. I have never seen anything like it. I had to throw away my dole whip because I walked a few feet with it in my hand and there was so many they flew into my Dole whip. To be honest, I could not wait to get home....it was so bad it ruined our trip. I really felt bad for families with little kids as they were freaking out. A lot of people were.

They were everywhere, all parks were equally gross. We went to Epcot thinking we could avoid them due to the park being mostly concrete....not likely....they were all over. Even the airport today was covered in them.
 
We were at epcot today and my dh was talking to our son and a lovebug flew right into his mouth. The changing table in the bathroom had a hord of them I had to shew off before i could change a diaper. Our windshield and front grate looks nasty.
 
<<How long is there seasona and when will they be gone>
I believe love bug season is april-may and Aug-Sept. So they should be gone by Oct. I hate these bugs yikes!
 
For those of us who live across the southern tier of the United States from Texas to South Carolina, the common love bug, Plecia nearctica Hardy, is a common sight this time of year.

This picture (courtesy Texas A&M) is what love bugs look like to a southerner.




Yep. That's what they really look like. They're most often seen in flight and crawling around in exactly this most compromising position. Every day for four weeks at a time. Twice a year. Everywhere you look. All day long.

They're not bad bugs.

They don't bite. They don't damage crops. They don't fly at night. They're not an environmental hazard. They're just...

Annoying.

Love bugs, you see, live to love. In the picture above, the big one's the female, and when she's filled with that loving spirit, she waits until 10 a.m. and climbs up onto some foliage. There, she waits for a squadron of boy bugs to come flying over.

The guys will have been aloft for about an hour or two by then, just hovering into the wind and trying to make themselves look attractive.

When a likely group flies over, the female springs into action, launching herself right into their midst, whereupon great excitement is unleashed. Sooner or later, a hopeful male will dart over and drape himself upon the back of the female. Now, this is a bug with an agenda. He wants the female to find someplace less crowded. His hope is that the flight will quickly disperse and leave him alone with his lady-love. At the same time, other, possibly more macho boy bugs are determined to dislodge the suitor. They dart in, and he holds on for dear life - his own and his progeny's. Even worse for him, the actual mating takes from a minute to ten minutes, in which time he has to hang on, get coupled, and turn around in the opposite direction to complete the deed.

Once successfully coupled, nothing on earth will ever sever or dis-sever their love. In fact, after the act is done, the male becomes just so much dead weight. The lady love bug turns her thoughts to being momma love bug, and she simply flies off. Unfortunately, daddy is still sort of locked into momma, and that's the familiar perspective we Southerners get to see, as in the drawing above. If he's lucky, she'll drop him off (or rub him off) on a handy bit of foliage. If he's unlucky, she'll just keep flying along with him haplessly in tow. (Dr. Phil Koehler, of the University of Florida says they like to "fly united.")

Don't feel bad about the losers, however. There's a second daily flight scheduled for 5 p.m., and four entire weeks for them to get lucky.

The female then lays her eggs. Her average life span is about 68 hours, but if she's got it in her to rise again, she can extend her life to about 89 hours, which is the only evidence I've ever heard of that this particular act can extend one's life span!

Now, all that's lovely, isn't it?

Actually, the problem with love bugs is that they also love things they should not. Like asphalt. And hot engines, vibration, and diesel exhaust. Naturally, this love leads them to our roadways where they encounter trouble.

Splat! Splat! Splat!

Sometimes hundreds of these copulating bugs per minute. Splat on the windshield, the mirrors, and the fins of the radiator. With enough love bugs, visibility through the windshield is reduced. Add enough love bug carcasses, and a car will overheat.

Love bug bodies are slightly acidic all by themselves, but if they remain in place on a car's finish for one or two days, bacterial action causes them to become more acidic, and they can etch car paint.

Dr. Koehler says that a love bug's "one important natural enemy is a car."

You may be wondering about the love bugs' contribution to the greater good. Other than exhibiting inspiring behavior in the face of adversity, their larvae do serve a useful function. They recycle organic matter.



More little known facts about love bugs

They were first described in 1940, by an entomologist named Hardy who lived in Galveston, Texas. Now they range from Costa Rica to South Carolina.
Deforestation and possibly the influx of cattle have added to love bug population density.
In most areas, flights take place during April to May and August to September, but in portions of Florida there is an additional flight in December.
Love bugs congregate at intersections, traffic lights, filling stations, and truck stops. They love diesel exhaust, warm car hoods, and engines.
The myth that love bugs eat mosquitos is totally unfounded. Adult love bugs are vegetarians.
Likewise, the myth that lovebugs were created by an experiment gone horribly wrong at the University of Florida is not true.
Love bugs are attracted to anethole, an essential oil found in some plants. This is what scientists use to bait sticky traps to catch them.

Sources
University of Florida Entomology Department
Love bug, Scientific Name: Plecia nearctica Hardy

Florida Environment Radio
Little to Love About Love Bugs

Florida Entomologist (vol. 83, no. 1)
Seasonal Flight of Plecia Nearctica in Southern Florida


Copyright (C) 2000 Lamar Stonecypher
(If you'd like to comment on this month's last word, consider leaving an entry in the Guestbook!)

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Well here in South Louisiana it has been horrible also! All I can say is that I think it is almost over! Today is the 1st day that I notice them starting to deminish. They are still there - but just not as bad. I was actually able to cut the grass and not worry about eating bugs. I think it has something to do with the cool nights we are having.

I have lived with these dang bugs all my life - and hate them. My last car was Black and I went 1 week without washing the bugs off - and they pitted my paint job on my brand new car. I was so mad at myself. I hate washing my car every day - but you have to do it.

One thing that nobody else seems to have mentioned. They Stink - Really Really Bad! :eek: When they are really bad - you can sometimes smell them from inside the car.
 
We were at Love Bug Kingdom, I mean Animal Kingdom yesterday and they were everywhere!! My DS and I tried to go on the Triceratops Spin and it was infested, dead ones all over the ground, live ones flying and crawling on the handrails in line. I'd never seen anything like it, I was bummed I didn't have my camera to take a pic. ;) The poor CM had a little white towel and she kept trying to brush them off the rails and away from people but she was loosing the battle. We decided to skip the ride. LOL.

We left and went to MGM, which was a little better but there were still areas they seemed to swarm like crazy. Tons dead all oevr the ground, they must have to power wasj every night. As we were leaving I felt a squish in my flip flop and sure enough I had one under my foot and another on the top that wouldn't wipe off, it was so gross.

Good news is they won't be around much longer.
 
GalDisney, that was quite a science lesson - I think I will use it at school tomorrow! They do not seem as bad in MS this year. We live about 1.5 hrs. north of Biloxi - they were horrible last year after Katrina. They must have moved on to Orlando this year. I do not miss them. :wave2:
 
Feralpeg said:
As others have said, they are only here for a short while. It will not be quite as warm the next couple of days. That may help some.


I think they are going to be gone soon now that free dining is over. :lmao:
 
We live about 40 miles south of the parks and our house is being attacked by lovebugs! Everytime we open a door a swarm of them fly in! I am squeamish when it comes to bugs, but we told our 4 yr old dd that these are nice bugs.....well, we keep finding them on the carpet...not alive any longer....so dd said they had boo-boos and needed band-aids. I thought she was just kidding around, but them I went into the living room and there were about 5 Lion King and Dora band-aids stuck to the carpet!

Hopefully these oh-so-lovable bugs will be leaving soon!
 
We leave for WDW on Oct 13th, hope these nasty little things are gone by then. Sounds like we just might miss them.

daannzzz said:

Those are frickin' disgusting!!! Another great reason for living in Seattle...No Nasty Bug Swarms!

phanomouse said:
Come on people don't you know that "Its Tough to be a Bug"?

:rotfl: :lmao: :rotfl2: :lmao: :rotfl:
 


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