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Gypsy Moth (Females) with Eggs Not a great shot as I took it with my cell phone! But, I wanted to upload it anyway to document the damage that these moths can do! <br />
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These are female moths with their eggs. Females have white wings, a tan body, and approximately a two-inch wingspan. They cannot fly. Rather, they simply crawl to a spot near where they pupated, and wait for a male to find them to mate. After mating, female gypsy moths lay a mass of eggs. Each egg mass can hold over a hundred eggs.<br />
During the summer of 2016 in Rhode Island (northeast US), these moths, which are an invasive species, were literally everywhere. You couldn&#039;t go outside, day or night, without seeing them. All you could hear in the woods was the sound of caterpillars pooping up in the tree canopy - it sounded like rain.  Gypsy moth caterpillars wreaked havoc and caused incredible amounts of tree carnage - it was estimated that approximately 3/4 of Rhode Island&#039;s forest canopy was destroyed, making this the worst outbreak in at least 15 years. A single caterpillar can eat a square foot of leaf matter in one day - they prefer hardwoods, but will also eat conifers, many of which will not recover.   Geotagged,Gypsy Moth,Gypsy moth,Lymantria dispar,Summer,United States,moth Click/tap to enlarge Country intro

Gypsy Moth (Females) with Eggs

Not a great shot as I took it with my cell phone! But, I wanted to upload it anyway to document the damage that these moths can do!

These are female moths with their eggs. Females have white wings, a tan body, and approximately a two-inch wingspan. They cannot fly. Rather, they simply crawl to a spot near where they pupated, and wait for a male to find them to mate. After mating, female gypsy moths lay a mass of eggs. Each egg mass can hold over a hundred eggs.
During the summer of 2016 in Rhode Island (northeast US), these moths, which are an invasive species, were literally everywhere. You couldn't go outside, day or night, without seeing them. All you could hear in the woods was the sound of caterpillars pooping up in the tree canopy - it sounded like rain. Gypsy moth caterpillars wreaked havoc and caused incredible amounts of tree carnage - it was estimated that approximately 3/4 of Rhode Island's forest canopy was destroyed, making this the worst outbreak in at least 15 years. A single caterpillar can eat a square foot of leaf matter in one day - they prefer hardwoods, but will also eat conifers, many of which will not recover.

    comments (2)

  1. Interesting documentation, a spectacular (in a bad way) case of an unchecked invasive species. If you're interested, on the forum we have a long running thread of examples of invasive species. I'll add your example to it as well:

    https://www.jungledragon.com/forum/2/campfire/189/beware_of_invasive_alien_species.html
    Posted 7 years ago, modified 7 years ago
    1. Excellent, thanks. I'll check out the thread and be on the lookout for invasives! Posted 7 years ago

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Lymantria dispar, the gypsy moth, are moths in the family Erebidae. Lymantria dispar covers many subspecies, subspecies identification such as L. d. dispar or L. d. japonica leaves no ambiguity in identification. Lymantria dispar subspecies have a range which covers in Europe, Africa, Asia, North America and South America.

Similar species: Moths And Butterflies
Species identified by Christine Young
View Christine Young's profile

By Christine Young

All rights reserved
Uploaded Feb 7, 2018. Captured Jul 14, 2016 07:52 in 55 Locust St, Coventry, RI 02816, USA.
  • iPhone 6
  • f/2.2
  • 1/30s
  • ISO50
  • 4.15mm