New February 2003

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Contents

Caterpillars

Royal moths and silkworm moths

Hornworms

Swallowtails

Tussock moths

Tiger moths

Slug caterpillars

Puss caterpillars

Cutworms, armyworms, underwings and dagger moths

Whites and sulphurs

Tent caterpillars

Brush-footed butterflies, fritillaries and wood nymphs

Prominents and oakworms

Loopers and cankerworms

Milkweed butterflies

Skippers

Bagworms

Snout and grass moths

Sawflies

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Caterpillars in Your Yard and Garden

Link to Caterpillars in Your Yard and Garden

Eastern tent caterpillars (Malacosoma americanum) are present from early spring to June. They produce one generation per year.


Eastern tent caterpillar

Full-grown caterpillars are mottled with a middorsal longitudinal, white stripe outlined by a narrow black line and bordered by a concentration of orange, wavy lines. Laterally, the body may have orange stripes, but there are blue and white markings on each segment just above the spiracles. Arising from the sides of the body are light-brown hairs. Host plants include apple, cherry, peach and plum, with serious damage often occurring on wild tree hosts.

About the family

Tent caterpillars belong to the Lasiocampidae family. Many caterpillar species of this group construct a thick, silken "tent" in the crotches of branches or small limbs on the host tree. The larvae do not feed inside the silken structure as the does the fall webworm. Rather, during the day, they leave the protective silk nest and feed on the foliage of neighboring limbs. Several species are important pests of forest and shade trees.

Wild thing

IPM1019, new February 2003