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Clouds of tiny bugs are swarming through NYC. Here's why that might be.
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CLOUDS OF TINY BUGS ARE SWARMING THROUGH NYC. HERE'S WHY THAT MIGHT BE.



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By
Brittany Kriegstein
,
Charles Lane
and
Nsikan Akpan

Published Jun 30, 2023

Modified Jun 30, 2023

61 comments

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By
Brittany Kriegstein
,
Charles Lane
and
Nsikan Akpan

Published Jun 30, 2023

Modified Jun 30, 2023

61 comments

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Share

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It may be the beginning of the ten plagues or it may just be the weather, but
clouds of tiny bugs are swarming New York City.

Over the past two days New Yorkers have reported running, biking, walking and
even taking the train through hordes of tiny bugs.

The little bugs have been caught on video, flying around parts of Manhattan and
Brooklyn and making it hard to breathe. They’ve even infiltrated subway
platforms. New Yorkers have said they’re hard to see until you’re in a cloud,
but they show up on your clothes and car windows and are easily ingested through
the mouth and nose.



Experts say they are aphids, but are still unsure what type of aphids and why
there are so many of them now.

“They definitely look like aphids,” said Sam Anderson, an urban agriculture
specialist with Cornell Cooperative Extension. “They don't look likely to be the
type of aphid that would be a common pest in a garden.”



Anderson and other bug experts around the city have been swarming social media
and buzzing each other on the phone, sharing photos trying to identify what type
of aphids these are. Anderson suspects they are sycamore aphids, which feed on
the sap of sycamore leaves.

David Lohman, a biology professor at the City College of New York who earned his
doctorate by dissecting the genitals of woolly aphids, says New York’s current
aphid clouds are not woolly aphids.

“What you're seeing in these photos is the sexual stage. These are males or
females that are going out to mate,” Lohman said. “My impression was that this
usually happened in the fall rather than the summer, but it might be different
in different species.”

Typically New York City has lots of aphids, we just never notice them, experts
say, as they are normally hunted by other predator insects. The best theory
behind their sudden appearance is simply a confluence of weather patterns
favorable to the aphids’ love language.

Humans, pets, trees, and tomato and strawberry plants should be safe from these
sap-suckers. And for fans of the ladybug, which feed on aphids: delight.

“It's possible that we'll see a flush of ladybugs or some other insect in
response to all these aphids,” Anderson said.





This story has been updated with new information.



Tagged

Health and Science
bugs
public safety

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Brittany Kriegstein
Twitter

Brittany Kriegstein covers all breaking news around New York City, with a focus
on crime and gun violence. Got a tip? Email Brittany at
bkriegstein@nypublicradio.org.

Read more
Charles Lane
Twitter

Charles is a Day-of reporter focused on breaking news and enterprise. He’s very
friendly and can be reached at charles@wnyc.org, or more securely on
whatsapp/signal 631-295-6715

Read more
Nsikan Akpan
Twitter

Nsikan runs the health and science desk at WNYC/Gothamist. Nsikan was previously
at National Geographic where he worked as a science editor, overseeing its
COVID-19 coverage in addition to other topics in science, health and technology.
Before National Geographic, he worked for more than four years at PBS NewsHour,
where he co-created an award-winning video series named ScienceScope. He shared
a 2020 Emmy for the PBS NewsHour series “Stopping a Killer Pandemic” and in 2019
received a George Foster Peabody Award for the PBS NewsHour series “The Plastic
Problem.” Nsikan has also worked for NPR, Science News Magazine, Science
Magazine, KUSP Central Coast Public Radio, the Santa Cruz Sentinel and as a
writer at the Center for Infection and Immunity at Columbia University. He holds
a doctorate in pathobiology from Columbia University and is an alum of the
science communication program at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

Read more

Gothamist is funded by sponsors and member donations

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