Stress Encourages Pest Problems
It is highly likely that when Japanese Beetles attack a plant in sufficient numbers to be obvious, that the plant was experiencing some degree of stress before the beetles appeared. Hybrid tea roses are the exception. They can be totally healthy and still be a magnet for beetles.
Pest insects target plants that are already struggling for some reason and lack the vigor to fend off their attacks. Researchers are examining the effects on insects of glutathione, a chemical produced by stressed plants. They have found that glutathione is actually beneficial for certain harmful insects--it aids their reproduction and growth, and may even bolster their ability to resist pesticides. So that may explain why Japanese beetles and other pest insects zero in on stressed plants. After you deal with the immediate Japanese beetle problem, try to figure out what might be causing the affected plant to be vulnerable to pest attack.
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