A complex of invasive root feeding weevils has recently undergone a population eruption in the upper Results/Conclusions We conducted field and laboratory assays to evaluate the effects of host utilization patterns. In the field, P. oblongus adult emergence was as high in patches of the late-season hosts, ironwood and raspberry, as it was in the early-season host, sugar maple. Emergence of P. sericeus was substantially higher from ironwood and raspberry than sugar maple. Laboratory assays were used to compare adult longevity and fecundity on sugar maple, ironwood, and raspberry. Host plant had minimal effect on adult longevity, but egg production of both weevils was significantly greater when fed raspberry than ironwood or sugar maple. Likewise, both species produced more eggs when fed on ironwood than sugar maple. These results have implications to four general areas of invasion ecology: the intersection of belowground herbivory and exotic insects; the impacts of and interactions among multiple invasive insect species; the effects one invasive complex, in this case rhizophagous insects, may have on a subsequent invasive complex, in this case earthworms which are beginning to occupy these sites; and the effects of forest management practices on invasive herbivores. Specifically, practices such as logging and road construction, and natural processes such as gap formation may indirectly benefit invasive weevil populations due to the positive effects of disturbance on raspberry.