USDA Asks Residents to Look for Invasive Egg Masses
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USDA Asks Residents to Look for Invasive Egg Masses
I went hiking with my family today :) 6.4 miles from one state park to another.
Spotted lanternfly eggs are going to hatch any day now.. make sure to scrape em off before they pop, grow up and start sucking the sap out of trees! The egg masses look like a 1" splat of mud, often found on the underside of tree branches. It's smooth in the fall, but looks cracked by the time spring rolls around. Kill these scums before they destroy the planet! Created by Keith Haskel, the world's #1 Leading Spotted Lanternfly Killer. www.keithhaskel.com Shot by Brad Hasse. Drone by Josh Weiss.
The Up North Progressive Guide to Dealing With Those Pesky Gypsy Moths: Egg Hunt
The Up North Progressive Guide to Dealing With Those Pesky Gypsy Moths: Egg Hunt
If you live up north in mid-July, 2021, you probably can’t help but notice cream-colored gypsy moths and their darker-hued boyfriends flying all over the place. Gypsy moths are non-native invasive species in North America. After the Civil War, gypsy moth eggs arrived in Boston in an attempt to develop a silk market in the United States. Since the 1860s, the insect has traveled across the eastern…
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