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Search Results for ' Pesticides and wildlife'
PAL Questions: - Garden Tools: 2
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Keywords: Trees--Diseases and pests, Pesticides and wildlife, Insect pests--Control, Biological control
Garden Tool: Gypsy moth is often in the news and with it comes the promise of aerial spraying of Btk by the department of agriculture. While the idea of the government spraying pesticides over an entire neighborhood may be frightening, a gypsy moth out-break would be devastating to the trees of the Emerald City or any city. Gypsy moths defoliate over 500 species of trees, both deciduous and evergreens.
Bacillus thuringiensis var. kurstakiis a bacterium that affects only caterpillars. It is considered an acceptable pesticide by organic gardeners, provided it used only when really needed. The major caterpillar pests in our area include:
- the larvae stage of the gypsy moth;
- cutworms that feed in winter and spring on primroses, chives and other perennials;
- tent caterpillar often seen later in the spring on apple trees;
- keep in mind that sawfly larvae which can strip a flowering red currant bare in a few weeks are not caterpillars, and Btk will not control them.
Season: Spring
Date: 2007-04-20
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Keywords: Tent caterpillars--Control, Pesticides and wildlife
Garden Tool:
In our zeal to eradicate the destructive tent caterpillars we may be inadvertently hurting the beautiful butterflies we love to see flitting around during the summer. If at all possible, cut out the conspicuous nests instead of spraying so that butterfly larva like Western Tiger Swallowtails, Mourning Cloaks can survive to grace our gardens every summer.
Season: Spring
Date: 2007-05-16
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April 19 2012 16:02:30


