| Forest Tent Caterpillar - Profile and How to Exterminate, Fumigate, Kill, Control or Get Rid Of. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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City of Toronto City of Toronto's Public Health Public Health, City of Toronto (416 338 7600)- Fact Sheet on Bed Bug Infestations - Rights and Responsibilities - NOV. 2008 |
Forest Tent Caterpillar HOSTS: Sugar maple, birch, oak, aspen and other deciduous. EVIDENCE: Shiny brown egg masses are present from July until early spring of the following year. They differ from those of eastern tent caterpillar in having square edges, and they completely encircle the twigs of host trees. Larvae, which are present in early spring, have distinctive keyhole-shaped white spots on the middle of the back of each segment. Defoliation of all except larger veins and petioles of the leaf occurs in May and June. The adult moths appear in July. LIFE CYCLE: Insects overwinter in masses of 150-200 eggs. Larvae emerge about the time leaves unfold in the spring and may feed at first on opening buds. Later they consume whole leaves. Unlike the eastern tent, forest tent caterpillars do not construct tents. They spin mats on which they rest and make pathways of silken threads to feeding sites. Pupation takes place in white, silken cocoons, often within rolled leaves. Adults emerge in July, mate, and lay eggs. Treatment will be Dragnet FT spray
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