DANGERS OF LIKELY MOTH OUTBREAK DISCUSSED IN OSOYOOS
Posted on 28 May 2009 by admin

Dr. Lorraine Maclauchlan gives Osoyoos resident and BC Grapegrowers Association president Manfred Freese a close-up look at the eggs of the destructive Douglas-fir tussock moth that are ready to hatch. She explained that these specimens picked near Osoyoos can literally drip from the trees as they hatch and greatly damage the fir and pine areas in the Okanagan Valley. Photos by Diane Zorn – Special to the Osoyoos Times
OSOYOOS TIMES-May, 27,2009
By Diane Zorn
Special to the Osoyoos Times
Dr. Lorraine Maclauchlan, a forest entomologist, was at the Osoyoos Best Western Sunrise Inn on May 21 to share information with the public on the likely infestation of Douglas-fir tussock moth caterpillars in the local area.
According to the provincial Forests and Range Ministry, an outbreak of the moths is happening along the Hwy. 3 corridor between Hedley and Osoyoos and is expected to spread into other parts of the Okanagan Valley.
However, the public failed to show up to the information meeting.
Only one person and the media attended the slide show and were shown a display of freshly picked cocoons from Douglas fir trees near Osoyoos.
“People are not aware of it yet, but when the caterpillars start dropping from the trees, and people notice the trees dying, they may start to get excited,” Maclauchlan said, indicating a plastic dish containing moth larvae.
Each short branch contained numerous moth egg masses that had been picked that day just outside of Osoyoos.
The moth outbreak is already evident near Spotted Lake.
Maclauchlan said that this may be the second year of a cycle that will see a severe outbreak.
The moth can strip a mature Douglas-fir tree bare in one year, leaving it dead.
These insects seem to appear about every 15 years in great enough numbers to decimate large stands of forest.
Since they tend to forage at lower elevations, the moths largely affect communities and recreation land.
“That’s where people build their homes, go camping, hike and bike,” Maclauchlan said. She has already seen dead trees in the Kamloops area where the infestation is into its third year.
The natural cycle seems to last three to four years before the moth’s numbers decline and the insects disappear again.
The last infestation in the Okanagan Valley was in the early 1990s.
The flightless female moth will lay her eggs in August.
Then, in late May or early June, hundreds of tiny caterpillars emerge attached to silk threads that float on the wind to other trees where the larvae begin to feed, turning the tree needles brown.
Damage begins at the crown of the tree and becomes more pronounced by July as the caterpillars feed.
This particular caterpillar has distinctive tufts of black spines that protect the larva from predators and also tend to cause allergic reactions in about 20 per cent of people.
Fortunately, this is a moth that the Forest and Range Ministry can help eradicate.
A group of U.S. and Canadian scientists working co-operatively in Hedley were successful in finding a naturally occurring virus that will kill the caterpillars.
Maclauchlan said the process of cultivating and sustaining a live virus for more than 15 years until an outbreak happens is an expensive program that only the government can afford to manage, so this is one situation where private property owners can look to the ministry for help.
The ministry monitors this species of moth by trapping and will notify landowners for permission to spray when they detect a large outbreak.
If people notice Douglas-fir or ponderosa pine trees turning brown and observe voracious caterpillars with a pattern of four white tussocks and long fine hairs along its back, they should contact the ministry.
Information is available online at http://www.for.gov.bc.ca/rsi/ForestHealth/Tussock_Moth.htm.
People are warned to avoid physical contact with the creature to avoid any possible allergic reaction.
stories@osoyoostimes.com





Hi,
We have a large number of tiny, thin, ugly caterpillars on silk threads hanging from our Douglas fir trees. They seem to attach themselves to anything. We have a 12 acre property in Joe Rich and over the years a large number of trees have died. Does this sound like a problem moth and if so, how can we get rid of them.
Vicki Streeter
These caterpillars have landed, spread out, matured and are cocooning again. Help! I am aghast at the speed with which they have denuded the fir trees. They are innumerable and insidious. Their effects rain from the trees as they turn complete branches of needles into caterpillar poop. I can only hope for some small nutrient benefit from the poop now as the shade, which was the trees greatest gift, diminishes rapidly. I can’t believe they leave the deciduous trees alone, but I am grateful. I wonder if they aren’t themselves benefiting from some other occurrence in nature as I also see numerous small bore holes in the bark of the trees and the sap is running from spots where there has been no branch removed. It is a most troubling situation as I don’t WANT to plant grapes. I just wanted what I had. In a month they have denuded over thirty percent of the foliage in over seventy percent of my 60-70 trees on a single lakeside acre. They are creating a massive fire hazard for the future. Highway 3 Keremeos to Hedley is laid waste by a single species of insect and that’s both amazing and perhaps a sign of significant change to come for the valley.
Stephen Brown
Nice moth T-shirt. Ants would be cooler, however.
We live in Paradise Valley, west of Peachland, and were in complete shock after returning from a two week vacation to see trees that looked healthy and green when we left home but had suddenly turned brown from top to bottom as a result of the devastating attack by the Tossock moth. There are suggestions that the trees will recover in the Spring however I am not optimistic that that will happen since the Spruce Bud Worm had the first crack at our trees earlier in the spring and ate all the tree’s buds. The entire Paradise valley has been defoliated. I have vacuumed 25 GALLONS of catapillars and cocoons just from my little red barn and children’s playhouse in the past two weeks. Fortunately my vacuum cleaner is powerfull enough to suck the female from the cocoon in most cases but I have 500 trees and can only stand in amazement as these voracious critters consume fir, spruce and now the pine trees that the Mountain Pine Beetle didn’t get.
HELP
Roy and Olive Ralph
Unfortunately these little pests have arrived enmass at Twin Lakes. They are now going into the cacoon stage and are plastered all over the golf course club house. With the RV park booked to capacity most of the time, I can only imagine how many are being transported to the coast and to Alberta.
Please help, how does one get rid of tussock moth on a 14 acre hobby farm? Thask Taryn