A: The column where I wrote about bagworms was July 12. However, there are several insects that have the common name of ...
A bagworm (Thyridopteryx ephemeraeformis) infestation in your trees or shrubs can lead to damaged or even dead plants. These destructive pests are actually caterpillars, representing the larval stage ...
If you've spotted large webs in trees along Ohio highways, the culprit may not be what you think. Fall webworms, which are ...
They feed on hundreds of tree species, though some of their favorites include black walnut, black cherry and hickories.
If you don't keep an eye out for bagworms, you may wind up with damaged or dead plants. Here, how to get rid of them—before it's too late!
A photograph genuinely showed a bagworm moth caterpillar and its "little log cabin" cocoon. In 2019, a photograph shared to ...
Q I think you had a recent piece in the Arkansas Democrat Gazette about bagworms.
People won’t be traipsing through Blue Ridge Christmas Tree Farm for over a month yet, but that doesn’t mean fields are empty ...
Some trees have just one or two, others, over a dozen. Some areas seem to be more inundated while other areas have none.
Researchers at the Florida Museum of Natural History and collaborating institutions have been collectively awarded $2,090,402 to study bizarre bagworms, outbreak dynamics of the bubonic plague, how ...
Unlike deciduous trees and shrubs, evergreens have a continuous need for water during fall and winter. When the ground dries out or freezes, the roots of evergreens can no longer supply water to the ...
Q: When shopping for plants, I see the term “semi-evergreen” mentioned occasionally. What does this mean, exactly? A: It’s a catch-all term that refers to the fact that the plant in question is ...