Charles H. Bronson, Commissioner    -    James R. Karels, Director
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Insects of HARDWOOD FOLIAGE
Bagworm
Cottonwood Leaf Beetle
Eastern Tent Caterpillar
Fall Webworm
Forest Tent Caterpillar
Gypsy Moth
Leafminers
Mites
Oak Leafroller / Leaftier
Sycamore Lace Bug
Variable Oakleaf Caterpillar
Whitemarked Tussock Moth
Yellownecked Caterpillar



 

Forest Health > Insects and Diseases publication

INSECTS of...Hardwood Foliage

Common Name:

FALL WEBWORM

Beginning nest of silk webbing made by FALL WEBWORM CATERPILLARS.

Beginning nest of silk webbing made by FALL WEBWORM CATERPILLARS.

 

 

 

 

Other Tiger moth
Species

Hypantria cunea

Common Hosts:

Baldcypress Taxodium distichum
Black walnut Juglans nigra
Hickories Carya spp.
Pecan Carya illinoenis
Persimmon Diospyros virginiana
Sweet gum Liquidambar styraciflua
Other hardwoods

Description

Adult -- white head and body; front wings white and with or without black spots; wingspan approximately 30 mm.
Pupa -- size of adult; brown; enclosed in a thin, transparent cocoon.
Larva -- size variable, approximately 35 mm long when mature; black or deep orange head, yellow to green body with a black stripe on back and a yellow on each side; long white or brown hairs.

Importance

The fall webworm is commonly seen along road sides and in pecan groves. Rarely of importance except aesthetically, however, severe repeated defoliation will cause extreme stress. In combination with other stress factors, death may follow.

Biology and Habits

Adult moths emerge from the soil, mate and females lay eggs in white cottony mats on the undersurface of leaves. The larvae feed together within the silk nests spun around entire branches. Pupate in the soil or leaf litter. Overwinter as pupae.
Number of Generations 3 or 4 generations per year.
Signs of Infestation
Nest of silk webbing enclosing branches or an entire tree. Skeletonized leaves. Masses of long-haired caterpillars in the silk nests.
Similar Damage
EASTERN TENT CATERPILLAR: silk nests in branch crotches.
Control
Natural enemies (wasps, flys, beetles, birds) and unfavorable weather usually keep populations at low levels. Outbreaks do occur, but usually subside in 1 or 2 years. Prune nests from small branches and destroy caterpillars. Promotes tree vigor and health to aid in the recovery from defoliation. Use of approved insecticide for high-value trees.



Bulletin No. 196-A | Printed October, 1983 | Contact the Forest Health Section
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Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services