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Monday, May 20, 2019

Good news for trees

Spotting a little green caterpillar on a weed I pulled from the perennial bed reminded me that this is the time when winter moth larvae (Operophtera brumata) make their way up trunks of trees such as the old oak that stands over this area of the garden.

Winter moth caterpillar

    That caterpillar was in for a surprise, though. Thanks to a team led by University of Massachusetts entomologist Joseph Elkinton, a parasitoid tachinid fly, Cyzenis albicans, is laying its eggs on leaves consumed by winter moth caterpillars. The fly’s offspring will kill most of the caterpillars that eat those leaves. What used to be an epidemic of nonnative pests defoliating trees in eastern Massachusetts has turned into no big deal.


    We used to notice clouds of male winter moths when they appeared in late fall, often lighting on windows and doors and sometimes making their way into the house. 


Winter moth caterpillars in November 2016

The wingless females can’t fly, but they can climb tree trunks to lay their eggs in bark crevices. The larvae emerge in March and devour leaf and flower buds, or they produce strands of silk that allow them to “balloon,” floating to other trees to spread the destruction. 

     Winter moth surged in Massachusetts in 2003 and found no native predators. At the height of the moths’ population boom, they affected most of our street trees, favoring the plentiful maples and oaks. It was alarming to walk down the street and see every tree leaf riddled with holes.

Birch leaf chewed by winter moth caterpillars, 2015

    To protect ornamental trees, the usual approach was to apply pesticides, and I did that for several years. I was telling myself that the treatment was relatively benign, because it used spinosad, an agent derived from naturally occurring soil bacteria.


Although it's a natural product, spinosad kills bees as well as winter moths

     Elkinton’s team took a different tack. In Europe, where it originated, winter moth has numerous insect predators. The scientists tested these to see which would be safe for release in New England, seeking an insect that targeted only winter moth and wouldn’t harm native insects. For the past 14 years, they’ve been releasing the parasitoid fly Cyzenis albicans to kill winter moth caterpillars. 

Cyzenis albicans-photo James K. Lindsey


    This year Elkinton has declared victory. After years of painstaking monitoring, his team has determined that winter moth populations are down to manageable levels. The parasitoid fly has become established, maintaining sufficient populations to keep winter moth under control.


    Predators need prey. If the flies eradicated all the winter moths, they’d have no food for their larvae. They would die out too. With both maintaining a stable presence, they can continue their interdependent dance.


    This is one of those scientific and ethical dilemmas where human beings have created a problem—in this case by unintentionally importing nonnative winter moths—and there’s no perfect response. If we did nothing, we’d likely lose many trees. 

  
     If we kept spraying pesticides, even targeted ones, we’d inevitably cause collateral damage to other insect species. That's why I stopped applying spinosad. So far, introducing nonnative Cyzenis albicans seems like the happiest solution for a thorny environmental problem.

Winter moths won't be troubling our oak anymore

1 comment:

  1. Isn't it wonderful? Just a few years ago I couldn't walk under our big maple in the spring without being pelted by winter moth droppings. I sprayed Bt (doesn't kill bees) and hoped for the best. Now, a non-issue. What do I do with the pressure sprayer sitting unused in the shed?

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