For many years, it was believed that there was no way to control the explosive growth of the stink bug population that has begun to plague the North American continent over the past few years. Each and every year, the population of stink bugs in North America has been rising at an alarming rate. Initially clustered in the northeastern regions of the United States, you can now find stink bugs spread across the entire continent, all the way to the west coast. Carrying their infamously nefarious stench with them wherever they go, this menace has been a source of major annoyance for the general population, while at the same time it has proven to be a ruinous force for the agricultural population.
Up until recently, there was no known way to keep the stink bug population in check. There had been no known predators in our environment that could kill stink bugs.
Researchers in the United States who have been commissioned with the task of studying stink bugs and identifying ways of how to kill stink bugs and keep their population under control have determined that there are indeed natural predators in the food chain that can be used to threaten the stink bug population:
Stink bugs, meet the Asian wasp.
What is interesting is that Asian wasps don’t attack stink bugs directly. Even if they were to try to, the foul stench that stink bugs emanate would be enough to drive the wasps away. Instead, what Asians wasps do is infiltrate the nests of stink bugs and attack the eggs that they lay. By doing this, the Asian wasp is able to keep the stink bug population under control, keeping new baby stink bugs from ever hatching.
Of course, this is not to say that the Asian wasp is a benign creature in its own right. We obviously don’t want to see the stink bug problem be replaced by an Asian wasp problem. But by introducing these wasps into the environment where stink bugs procreate and create their nests, it is hoped that we can keep the population from growing any larger than it has.
Left unchecked, we may find that the stink bug problem will only get worse in the upcoming years to come. This is only one way to address the problem of how to kill stink bugs: Let nature take its course.
In the meantime, of course, we need to do our part to address the stink bug problem. Other methods for how to mitigate the stink bug problem include taking measures to prevent stink bugs from entering your home by sealing it properly, setting up stink bug traps, power washing your home.
If you aren’t sure what to do to address the stink bug problem on your own, or you just don’t have the stomach to deal with the problem by yourself because stink bugs make you squeamish, then you can always enlist the help of a professional extermination service and sic them on these annoying creatures. A professional extermination service will be able to advise you as to what is the best way how to kill stink bugs.