Pine and Spruce Insects
Gypsy Moth
Gypsy moth (Lymantria dispar) feed on a wide range of plants
including pines and spruces. When the hosts are present and the
infestation is light, gypsy moth prefer to feed on alder, hawthorn,
lindens, oaks (the most preferred tree), poplars and willows. As
infestation is increased, black gum, elms, hickories, maples and
sassafras are eaten. When infestations are at peak levels, the larvae
also feed on arborvitae, beech, hemlock, pines and spruce. Larvae
seldom if ever feed on ash, balsam fir, catalpa dogwoods, holly,
junipers, sycamores, tuliptree, and trees in the Juglans genus.
Conifers are usually killed by one severe year of heavy feeding.
Deciduous trees can usually tolerate several years of severe feeding
before declining and possibly dying, The adult male is brownish
and the adult female is whitish. The male can fly but the female
in the midwest populations cannot.
  The egg mass is about the size of a silver dollar and is light
brown (tan). The eggs are laid whereever the female feels like leaving
them (in car wheel wells, in side swing sets & gutters, sides
of houses & trees, and so on). Eggs hatch in Northern Illinois
about mid-May. The larvae climb from where the eggs were laid on
and spin a silk thread. Using the wind they may be carried several
hundred feet to several miles. The larvae are covered with hairs
that irritate many predators and sometimes, humans may even develop
irritations from the hairs. When infestations are light the larvae
feed mostly at night. When infestation are heavy the larvae may
feed continuously. After about 6 to 7 weeks, the larvae are ready
to pupate. The larvae leave the trees to find a sheltered area.
Adults begin to emerge in July. Usually the males are out several
days before the females. Males can detect females as far as a mile
away. The adults do not feed but die soon after mating and laying
eggs.
Spray with Bacillus thuringiensis 'Kurstaki' (considered
"organic") or check with your local land grant university
(Cooperative) Extension Service for a recommended insecticide. |
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Written by James
Schuster, Extension Educator, Horticulture, and reviewed
by Dr. Phil Nixon Extension State
Specialist, Entomology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
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