Posts Tagged: Light brown apple moth
LBAM--Not Your Typical Invader
The light brown apple moth (Epiphyas postvittana)--it's not your typical invader. UC Berkeley professor Nick Mills will head to UC Davis on Wednesday, Feb. 20 to speak on just that: "The Light Brown Apple Moth--Not a Typical Invader." The seminar,...
Female light brown apple moth, Epiphyas postvittana. (Photo courtesy of David Williams, principal scientist, Perennial Horticulture, Department of Primary Industries, Victoria, Australia.)
Male light brown apple moth, Epiphyas postvittana. (Photo courtesy of David Williams, principal scientist, Perennial Horticulture, Department of Primary Industries, Victoria, Australia.)
Medfly and Moth Wars
James R. Carey is used to dissent. The entomology professor at the University of California, Davis, fervently believes that the Mediterranean fruit fly and light brown apple moth, two exotic and invasive pests, have long been established in California...
James Carey
Light Brown Apple Moth
LBAM: What's the Status?
Remember the ravenous light brown apple moth (LBAM) and all the controversy? The invasive agricultural pest, from Down Under, soars high on the agenda at the Northern California Entomology Society’s meeting on Thursday, Nov. 5 in Concord. Also on the...
Male Light Brown Apple Moth
Female Light Brown Apple Moth
Good Question
Most entomologists I know maintain a keen sense of humor. They have to, or the insects (or the people concerned about them) will drive them buggy! At the Northern California Entomology Society meeting in Concord last...
William Roltsch
Not Again!
Not again! The light brown apple moth, also known as "the eat-everything moth" because its larvae dine on about 250 host plants, is back in the news again. We received a press release yesterday (Nov. 5) from Stephen...
Male light brown apple moth
Female light brown apple moth