When I came home the other day this was on the wall by my front door. I believe it’s a False Potato Beetle.

The false potato beetle (Leptinotarsa juncta) is a beetle found primarily in the Mid-Atlantic and Southeastern United States. Its distribution extends to Maine.

Adult beetles emerge from the soil in the late spring or early summer and begin breeding, and a population may go through one to three generations in a summer.

The false potato beetle feeds on solanaceous weeds such as horsenettle, Solanum carolinense. It also feeds on other solanaceous plants, such as species of ground cherry or husk tomato, Physalis spp., and bittersweet, Solanum dulcamara, but no growth and reproduction occurs when feeding on the potato, Solanum tuberosum (Wikipedia)

It’s not considered a serious pest, at least not compared to the Colorado Potato beetle., which it resembles.

Taken with a Sony A7IV and and Laowa 85mm f5.6 Macro 2:1

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