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  1. Gypsy Moths have preference for oaks, but they will attack the foliage of most trees and shrubs. Adults differ in appearance, males being brown with a fine, darker brown pattern on the wings. Females are nearly white, with a few dark markings on the wings. Females do not fly. Caterpillars climb trees and feed mostly at night.

  2. The female spongy moth (gypsy moth) lays an egg mass, covering it with body hairs to act as insulation and to help protect the eggs from predators. Shortly after the female spongy moth (gypsy moth) lays the egg mass, she dies, and the eggs wait out the winter until temperatures rise in the spring and a hatch begins.

  3. The Gypsy Moths DRAMA Burt Lancaster ("From Here to Eternity"), Gene Hackman ("Absolute Power") and Scott Wilson ("Pearl Harbor") star as sky-divers staging a show in a small town in Kansas.

  4. Gypsy moths are easy to identify because of their distinct coloring during their four developmental stages—egg, caterpillar (larva), pupa, and adult moth. To determine if you have these destructive pests in your yard here’s what to look for: Containing anywhere from 400 to 500 eggs, the moth’s teardrop-shaped egg masses are tan to ...

  5. Gypsy moth is a polyphagous insect, the host range of the North American strain of gypsy moth consists of over 300 species of trees and shrubs compared to the Asian strain which has a host range that exceeds 500 species. Overview in the West . Eradication projects have been conducted for European gypsy moth populations throughout the

  6. Nov 16, 2018 · How Leopold Trouvelot Introduced the Gypsy Moth to America. Trouvelot's home on Myrtle St. in Medford, MA, where imported gypsy moths first escaped.From "The Gypsy Moth," by E.H. Forbush and C.H. Fernald, 1896. Sometimes an entomologist or naturalist makes his mark on history unintentionally. Such was the case with Etienne Leopold Trouvelot, a ...

  7. Spongy moth is an invasive pest that has been spreading westward since its introduction to North America. Caterpillars feed on the leaves of many species of trees and shrubs, especially oaks, and can cause severe leaf loss when feeding in large numbers. For more information, call (800) 642-MOTH (6684), email spongymoth@wisconsin.gov.

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