The Stanislaus Sprout
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Hoplia Beetles on light colored roses and other flowers

Beetle on a white rose damaged by it.
Hoplia beetle on a rose, J. Kelly Clark.
You may have noticed swarms of flying insects landing on your roses, calla lillies, hydrangeas, and other flowers. If you look closely, you'll see the insect inside the flower, and the chewing damage on the petals. These pests are hoplia beetles, but are often misidentified as Japanese beetles or rose chafer beetles.

Beetles are the most plentiful of all insects on the planet, so it's understandable to get a few of them confused. Let's compare photos and other details about each of these beetles, and also mention the green June beetle, a beetle that is commonly mistaken for the Japanese beetle.

Japanese Beetles

Small green beetle with white dots along the outside edges of it's body.
Japanese beetle, Creative Commons license.

Japanese beetles do not have an established population in California. The California Department of Food and Agriculture* (CDFA) maintains traps for detecting this pest throughout the state. When Japanese beetles are found in California, they are targeted for eradication (complete elimination). Read more about this invasive species on the UC IPM website at https://ipm.ucanr.edu/Invasive-and-Exotic-Pests/Japanese-Beetle/ 

Green Fruit Beetles

Green fruit beetles are a dull green color and much larger than Japanese beetles. You may notice them in late spring and summer as they zoom around your garden. Fortunately, they are rarely a pest. https://ipm.ucanr.edu/PMG/GARDEN/FRUIT/PESTS/grfruitbeetle.html 

Large green beetle on a peach fruit.
Green fruit beetle, J. Kelly Clark.

Rose Chafer Beetles

The rose chafer beetle resembles the hoplia beetle, however, this pest is not found in California. You can read more about these beetles on this informational page from University of Minnesota https://extension.umn.edu/yard-and-garden-insects/rose-chafers 

Hoplia Beetles

Hoplia beetles are small, brown, and their undersides look like they've been dusted in gold. If you hold one in your hand, they will “play dead” and not move, making it easy to examine them.

Tan colored beetle on a green leaf.
Rose chafer beetle, University of Minnesota.
The best way to manage hoplia beetles is to regularly handpick or shake them off flowers into a bucket of soapy water and then dispose of it. This can help reduce beetle populations in the future. You can also fill white, 5-gallon buckets with water and a few drops of detergent. The white color may attract the beetles which will fall into the bucket and drown. Using a pesticide to spray the beetles is not recommended, as it does not work. Hopefully by June, hoplia beetles will have completed their lifecycle and disappear from our gardens.

You can read more details about managing hoplia beetles in the UC IPM Pest Notes: Hoplia Beetles.

*it's important that we help prevent invasive pests from taking hold in our communities and threatening agricultural crops. You can help by saying "yes" when trappers from the Agricultural Commissioner's Office ask if they can place traps in your landscape tree.

Anne Schellman is the Coordinator for the UC Cooperative Extension Master Gardener Program.

This article was originally published on May 8, 2023.