Exceptionally warm weather last week has forsythia in full blossom. While forsythia’s bright yellow blossoms are the harbinger of spring, they also mark the emergence of an impressive tree pest, the eastern tent caterpillar. Last summer, autumn, and winter this pest survived as eggs on the small branches of trees like cherry and apple. With the warmth of the early spring, tiny caterpillars are beginning to hatch from the dark brown, Styrofoam-like egg masses.
More than 300 hundred larvae can be found in a single egg mass. Larvae build small silken tents over the egg mass and the surrounding branch. From this bivouac they move along silken trails to the newly expanding leaves of their host tree where they feed. As larvae grow during March and April, they need more room and expand their tents. Eventually tents will be constructed in the crotches of large branches or where large limbs branch from the trunk. Eastern tent caterpillars are rather a chummy lot. Brothers and sisters from the same egg mass often participate in group activities such as communal foraging and enlargement of their remarkable tent. Their silken homes may provide protection from predatory or parasitic insects. Tents may also help caterpillars conserve moisture and elevate their body temperature for more rapid growth and development during chilly spring days. These hairy caterpillars have voracious appetites and can strip even large trees of their leaves when many tents are present.
After the caterpillars have completed development, a mass exodus occurs from the tree and the larvae wander the land seeking protected spots beneath logs, leaves, stones, and under man-made structures to spin yellowish or white, silken cocoons. The adult eastern tent caterpillars emerge as moths from their cocoons in June or July, mate and lay eggs on the small branches of rosaceous trees such as cherry, apple, and crab apple. These eggs house the next generation of caterpillars that will emerge with the bloom of forsythia next spring. How do you know if eastern tent caterpillars threaten your trees? The best predictor of a problem this year may be the problem you had last year.
The images of this bug of the week came from a small stand of wild cherry trees that are perennially infested with eastern tent caterpillars. If you had a cherry, apple, or purple plum with tent caterpillars last spring, now is an excellent time to carefully inspect the pencil sized branches for egg masses and tiny silken webs. The egg masses are easily removed with a pinch of the fingers or if you are a bit squeamish about touching bugs, simply get out your nippers and prune them out. As the tents enlarge and move to the crotches of the tree, tents and their inhabitants can be removed with a gloved hand on a cool day, placed in a bag, and destroyed. The old school remedy of “burning them out”, though dramatic, went out with the storming of Frankenstein’s castle. Flames are very damaging to the bark of a tree and should not be used. Tall trees festooned with tents may be totally stripped of leaves. While trees may recover and produce a second flush of leaves, repeated defoliation probably reduces their vigor. If you have a tall tree from which you cannot safely remove eggs or tents, you may want to seek the help of a professional certified arborist. Entomologists believe that eastern tent caterpillar populations run in cycles. After a few years of caterpillar plague, natural enemies such as predators, parasites, and pathogens reduce the tent caterpillars to innocuous levels. Are we on the way up or down? Time will tell.
References:
For more information on eastern tent caterpillars, visit the following web sites.