The Korea Herald

Lovebugs swarm cities as summer arrives

- By Choi Jeong-yoon (jychoi@heraldcorp.com)

Parts of the Greater Seoul area, which includes Incheon and Gyeonggi Province, have once again come under attack this year by swarms of the newly emerging summer nuisance referred to as “lovebugs,” stoking a significan­t surge in complaints from residents in the area.

First spotted in northweste­rn Seoul and Goyang, Gyeonggi Province, in 2022, swarms of lovebugs have spread to appear from eastern Seoul, such as Dongdaemun-gu and Seongdong-gu, to Gangseo-gu in the far southweste­rn area of the city.

Due to their drastic increase over the past two years, the number of complaints submitted to the Seoul municipal government increased 27 percent from 4,418 in 2022 to over 5,600 last year, recent data released by Rep. Yun Young-hee showed.

Unlike in 2022, when complaints were concentrat­ed in the northweste­rn boroughs of Eunpyeongg­u, Seodaemun-gu and Mapo-gu, last year’s complaints came from all 25 districts. In Gangseo-gu, 207 complaints were submitted last year, after just two complaints the previous year.

Experts believe climate change and rising temperatur­es are responsibl­e for the outbreaks, as insects prefer conditions with higher temperatur­es and humidity.

As a heat wave has gripped Korea earlier than last summer, lovebugs have been spotted nearly half a month earlier this year. According to the National Institute of Biological Resources, the first observatio­n of lovebugs was recorded on June 15 last year, 13 days later than this year, when they were first spotted on June 2.

“Due to global warming,

lovebugs have been appearing in large numbers since three years ago, and there are media reports that the emergence time has been accelerate­d by 10 days this year,” Rep. Yoon said in front of the Seoul public health commission­er. “The problem is expected to become more serious in the future as a major outbreak is predicted to start this weekend and the outbreak area is expected to spread.”

Lovebugs are a species of march fly. While their scientific name is plecia nearctica, they attained the nickname “lovebugs” because matured pairs remain together for several days after mating.

Though lovebugs are not toxic or harmful to humans as they do not bite or sting — instead their larvae act as decomposer­s in the natural habitat by converting plant materials into nutrients — they have become a nuisance following invasions of residentia­l areas and local shops, where they tend to stick to clothing and vehicles.

 ?? ?? A picture showing a swarm of lovebugs on an unidentifi­ed person’s hand.
A picture showing a swarm of lovebugs on an unidentifi­ed person’s hand.

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