Eastern Boxelder Bug

Boisea trivittata

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image of a boxelder bug
Notoriously numerous, boxelder bugs have a flattened back with red markings that sometimes form an X.
Donna Brunet
Other Common Name
Box Elder Bug
Family

Rhopalidae (scentless plant bugs) in the order Hemiptera (true bugs)

Description

The eastern boxelder bug is a harmless blackish insect. The flattened back has red markings that sometimes form an X, and there is a red line along the outer edge of the closed wings. The membranous parts of the forewings have noticeable veins.

Immature stages are bright red with black legs. The wing buds (tiny, immature wings) are slate-gray or blackish.

Size

Length: to ½ inch.

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image of boxelder bug nymphs
Boxelder Bug Nymphs
Immature boxelder bugs are red with black legs.

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Image of boxelder bug.
Boxelder Bug
Boxelder bugs are infamous for their habit of swarming on the sunny sides of houses.

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Photo of a small swarm of boxelder bugs on foliage of a potted citrus plant.
Boxelder Bugs
Boxelder bugs' black and red markings apparently warn predators that they are distasteful, but praying mantises and spiders eat them anyway.

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Eastern boxelder bugs swarming on concrete near a house
Eastern Boxelder Bugs
Eastern boxelder bugs go dormant as the weather gets colder, but they may become active anytime in winter if they are warmed up.
Habitat and conservation

Boxelder bugs live on and near their food plant, the box elder tree, so they occur wherever those trees are found — forests, bottomlands, yards, parks, and more. In autumn you may see hundreds of these bugs crawling on the outside of your house, usually on the warm, south-facing side, as they seek winter shelter. They go dormant as the weather gets colder, but if they are warmed by your home’s heating, they may revive and enter your house, mistaking its warmth for springtime.

Foods

Like many other true bugs (such as cicadas, aphids, stinkbugs, and leafhoppers), boxelder bugs have strawlike mouthparts for sucking plant juices. The preferred food plant is box elder (Acer negundo), though they are sometimes also found on other maples, especially silver maples, and ash trees. Generally, they feed on the soft, leafy parts of the trees. Oddly enough, boxelder bugs rarely hurt their host trees.

image of Boxelder Bug Distribution Map
Distribution in Missouri

Statewide.

Status

Common. Their occurrence is linked to the availability of their food plants, so an area with many box elder trees will have more boxelder bugs than an area with none or very few.

Life cycle

Like many other insects, boxelder bugs molt through a number of immature stages before their final molt, when they become winged, sexually mature adults. In autumn, large nymphs and adults congregate at protected overwintering sites: in the nooks of box elder bark, under the siding of a house, and so on. At the end of March they emerge from dormancy, and near the end of April they begin laying eggs, again in crevices of box elder tree bark.

Human connections

If boxelder bugs “bug” you, consider removing nearby box elders and silver maples. Vacuuming, swatting, and using sticky traps can help. Insect-proof the house (put screens on vents, caulk cracks, etc.). If you use an insecticide, make sure it works on this species, and follow the directions carefully.

Ecosystem connections

The red markings on boxelder bugs apparently warn predators that they are distasteful, but many predators, such as praying mantises and some spiders, readily eat them anyway. The multicolored Asian lady beetle is another species that swarms in late summer and enters cracks in homes. It, too, emits foul odors to avoid predation, and it also has a bright "warning" coloration.