Warning over strange froth people are spotting on their garden plants
13.06.2022 - 16:34
/ manchestereveningnews.co.uk
UK homeowners are being warned to look out for an unusual froth that can appear in your garden during the summer months. Since the country has been experiencing warmer weather, people have begun spotting the strange substance on their garden plants.
The froth can often be seen clumped onto plant stems or in a patch off grass and typically looks like ball of froth of foam. Homeowners are being urged to keep their eyes peeled and report any sightings of it as it has the potential to be harmful.
The warning has come as the froth could be linked to the spread of an deadly plant disease which can harm native species, reports Yorkshire Live.
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The spittle, as it's known, is made by an insect called a spittlebug, which produces the unusual substance that then gets left behind on plants and in long grass.
The spittlebug coats itself in a ball of foam for protection as it sucks on the sap from a plant for nutrition. The red and black creatures' offspring, also known as froghoppers, then hatch on a plant which has the leftover ball of foam.
The insect is usually active from the end of May to the end of June, so it's peak season for sightings right now.
Though the insects feed on the plants, they don't remove enough nutrition to harm it and they don't hurt humans, so you don't need to do anything to get rid of the spittle.
However scientists are worried that a deadly plant disease known as Xyella could be spread between plants by the spittlebug as a carrier.
The Xyella disease has devastated olive groves in Italy in the past few years and experts have called Xyella one of the world's most dangerous pathogens.
If it was found in