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New study on stinkbugs gets $5.7 million

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READING, Pa., Oct. 9 (UPI) -- The U.S. Agriculture Department is funding a $5.7 million study of stinkbugs, an insect now associated with crop destruction as well as being a household pest.

Stinkbugs, originally from China, Japan and Korea, first arrived in the United States in 1996 in Reading, Pa., The Philadelphia Inquirer reported Sunday.

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They mostly stayed in eastern Pennsylvania and New Jersey region until recently. They have been seen now in 33 states.

In 2010, stinkbugs were blamed for destroying $37 million worth of apples in the Mid-Atlantic region, and assessments are under way to determined the amount of damage they caused this year.

Stinkbugs have also attacked soybeans, corn, tomatoes, raspberries and grapes.

"There's a lot not known about [stinkbugs]," said expert John Tooker of Pennsylvania State University, "... because there wasn't a lot of evidence they were doing economic damage beyond a small region of the country."

Now, the federal government is funding the multimillion-dollar study to learn about the insect.

The Brown Marmorated Stink Bug Working Group is head by Tracy Leskey, a research entomologist in West Virginia, and George Hamilton, chairman of Rutgers University's department of entomology.

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Stinkbugs "are pretty sharp," Tooker said of the insect that has been around for about 37 million years. "They're not just a bumbling mistake of evolution."

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