Continental United States of America and of Mexico are where desert stink bugs live.
Specifically, the bug in question carries the scientific name Chlorochroa osborni. It carries the additional common name of terrestrial turtle bug in English. It is not well-known since it ranks among the lesser-studied insects. It tends to be a familiar form of stink bug in Oklahoma and Texas even though its feeding does not get as much out of hand as its relatives, such as the exotic invader called the brown marmorated stink bug (Halyomorpha halys). Its species name tracks back to Henry Fairfield Osborn (1857-1935), a 19th- and 20th-century educator at Columbia and Princeton Universities and the American Museum of Natural History's vertebrate Paleontology curator (1891-1909) and president (1909-1933).
Yes it is and it smells bad.
no it will not. the stink bugs protection will always be there
Desert lizards eat bugs that live in the desert.
Stink bugs belong to the family Pentatomidae.
stink bugs r not female because females don't stink male dofemale stink bugs NO male r stink bugs
stink bugs are rarelypoisonous some that have a disease are but no stink bugs are poisonous so that's all
Yes, stink bugs do have a hard outside shell. The bugs are not poisonous.
Yes, plant juices are a staple of their diet.
No. Asian Lady Beetles (Stink Bugs) are everywhere!
They are born with that defense.
Stink bugs came from Asia in a cargo shipment.
no birds eat stink bugs because well they stink.