Ar_home_b_search
 

Web Worms

 Been noticing all the trees with the webs lately? In the Dallas / Worth area, they thrive mostly in the pecan trees. They are called webworms, latin name Hyphantria cunea.

These inch-long green or yellow caterpillars, bristling with silky hairs, are actually moth larvae. In summer and early autumn they weave expansive webs that bind together the ends of branches. They eat every leaf within reach, continually building larger webs until late autumn, when they pupate. Resembling dirty rags and filled with black droppings and wriggling worms, the webs ruin the aesthetics of any garden.

One way to combat these is to get a long pole and rip the web pocket open in the morning. With the web open, birds throughout the day will feed on the worms.

To plan an effective schedule of prevention and control, it helps to understand the life cycle of Hyphantria cunea. In early spring, moths come fluttering up from cocoons carefully hidden in the bark of tree trunks and in ground debris. The adult moths are about 2 inches from wingtip to wingtip and are white spotted with brown. They lay eggs in clusters on the leaves of suitable host plants.

The eggs hatch within a week. Out come tiny caterpillars, the first generation of the growing season, spinning webs and eating leaves. This first infestation is so mild that sometimes the webs go unnoticed.

The first-generation caterpillars have eaten their fill by early summer. They form cocoons and pupate, usually in the bark, of a tree or underneath leaves or other debris on the ground. By midsummer they re-emerge as moths. A second generation follows -- this time larger and more destructive.

Because the webworms -- in one form or another -- are present year-around, it's possible to devise a year-round strategy for dealing with this pest. Here are some tactics that have worked for me:

* In winter or early spring, remove fallen leaves, ground debris and mulch, which may harbor overwintering webworm pupae. Replace the debris with fresh, pest-free mulch.

* Inspect susceptible plants for the greenish egg masses, which are typically laid on the undersides of leaves and are protected by a woolly or scaly covering. Eggs are deposited from late spring through fall. Remove any affected leaves and destroy them. This strategy requires time and sharp eyes and is obviously impractical for tall trees.

* Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) is a microbial pesticide that can be applied as a dust or spray. It kills many types of caterpillars but has no effect on warm-blooded animals or bees.

With fall webworms, Bt is effective only if its application is properly timed. Once the caterpillars have enshrouded themselves in webs, they are more difficult to kill. Check on susceptible plants frequently, beginning in late spring, and apply Bt at the first sign of hatching webworms. Bt loses effectiveness after about two days, so it must be reapplied as long as more larvae are hatching.

Always use Bt with care, because it also can kill the larvae of non-pest moths and butterflies.

* When you see webs, clip the infested branches and burn them, or drown the larvae in a bucket of soapy water. A pole pruner with a lopper blade will help you reach webs within 16 feet or so of the ground.

 

 

 

 

6 Comments on Fall season webworms.....how to combat them

OCT
14
2007
367,409 Points 5 Featured Posts Outside Blog Called Shot Master
Good tips!  Thank goodness we will have our first frost soon in New England.  Though, I do not like the cold, I love that it stops all these critters;) We have ticks, that spread Lyme disease.  It's bad, but, the frost, usually the 2nd time, kills the ticks.
6:27pm • #1

I used to have those buggers on my Black Walnut trees in North East Penn. Called "tent Caterpillars"

I found that they were best gotten rid of by buying a can of wasp spray that shot out about 25 foot.

Squeezing the sprayer while holding a lit cigarette lighter in front of the spray nozzle.

Instant flame thrower.

Of course this goes without saying, Don't try this at home. this method is best left to the professional nut job.

6:32pm • #2
3 Featured Posts

Are they edible?  because Im starving

7:30pm • #3
OCT
16
2007
Attended Rain Camp

Thanks, Kent!  Now I know what to do with those "webs" on my River Birch!  My birds will be feasting today!  

Patty

10:11am • #4
OCT
18
2007
233,380 Points Outside Blog
As a kid we would get paid to burn them.  We would put an oil soaked rag on a long stick and go at them.  Don't know if it did any good or if it was the same creatures but at the time it was pretty cool.  That was up in the Seattle area.
1:04pm • #5
250,060 Points 17 Featured Posts Localism Sponsor
Good post!  Such a yukky thing we have to deal with every year.  I hate them.
1:17pm • #6

What does the graphic say?

Leave a response…



(optional)
What does the graphic say?
 
Kent_head2

Home Inspector Fort Worth TX- Kent Keith

Fort Worth, TX

More about me…

Fort Worth Home Inspectors - Green Tag Inspections

Address: P.O. Box 470815, Fort Worth, TX, 76147

Cell Phone: (817) 705-3200

Email Me

Fort Worth Home Inspector


Links

Archives

RSS 2.0 Feed for this blog