
Appearance
The wingspan is about 11 mm. Adults emerge in early spring, at times as early as February in Florida. There are four to five generations per year in Florida.Food
Larvae feed on various pine species, including ''Pinus caribaea'', ''Pinus cubensis'', ''Pinus banksiana'', ''Pinus taeda'', ''Pinus contorta'', ''Pinus radiata'', ''Pinus oocarpa'', ''Pinus rigida'', ''Pinus serotina'', ''Pinus ponderosa'', ''Pinus resinosa'', ''Pinus clausa'', ''Pinus sylvestris'', ''Pinus echinata'', ''Pinus elliottii'', ''Pinus glabra'', ''Pinus pungens'' and ''Pinus virginiana''. It is considered a serious pest of young pine in plantations, wild pine seedlings in open areas, Christmas tree plantings, ornamental pines, and pine seed orchards. Young larvae feed on the outside of new growth for a short period of time and later bore into shoot tips, conelets and buds. Larval feeding continues for three to four weeks. Pupation occurs in damaged tissues.References:
Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.