
Mealybugs
Soft white insects coated in cottony fluff, 2 to 4 mm long. Tuck into the rachis-leaflet junctions where each pair of leaflets emerges from the central stalk. Slow-moving and easy to miss because the waxy glossy leaflets reflect light away from the colonies hiding in the joints.
White cottony specks lined up along the rachis where leaflets attach. A sticky shiny film on leaflets below the cluster. Leaflets yellow and drop one pair at a time. Severe infestations stall the plant and stop new rachises from emerging from the rhizome.
Cotton swab dipped in 70% isopropyl alcohol
Dab every visible mealybug. The alcohol melts the waxy coating and kills on contact. Pull leaflet pairs gently apart to reach colonies tucked into each rachis-leaflet junction. ZZ plant's thick waxy leaflets handle the alcohol well. Repeat every 3 days for 3 weeks to catch newly hatched eggs.
Insecticidal soap spray, weekly for 4 weeks
Spray ready-to-use insecticidal soap (Safer Brand, ~$10) on every rachis and into the leaflet joints at lights-out. Repeat every 7 days for 4 weeks because eggs hatch in protected joint pockets over time. The waxy leaflets shed soap residue easily, so reapplication matters.
Isolate the plant from your collection
Move the ZZ plant at least 6 feet from other houseplants. Mealybugs spread by crawling. Wipe nearby pots, the windowsill, and any tools that touched the infested rachises.

