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For immediate release: July 1, 2009
Contact:
John Lundberg (360) 586-8459 |
WASHINGTON STATE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE P.O. Box 42560, Olympia, Washington
98504-2560
This news release is also available as a
PDF. |
2009 WSDA gypsy moth summer trapping underway
OLYMPIA — Trappers are currently laying
down the dragnet for a defoliator that is a serious
threat to the forest industry, production agriculture
and the cityscapes of the Evergreen State. The
Washington State Department of Agriculture's (WSDA)
annual gypsy moth trapping program will seek the
invasive insect in every county of the state.
Between now and mid-July, WSDA trappers will place
almost 24,000 small cardboard traps in residential
neighborhoods and business districts, near ports and in
rural areas. The traps will be checked every two to
three weeks during the summer before being taken down in
September.
John Townsend, state trapping
coordinator for WSDA, is looking forward to the trapping
season. "If any moths are out there, we will find them,"
he said. "Our summer moth catches will largely determine
if eradication treatments occur in 2010."
Washington's 35-year old gypsy moth control program has
been very successful. Washington has never had a
permanent population of gypsy moths, unlike 19 states in
the East and Midwest where thousands of acres are
permanently infested. The state's last eradication
treatment project took place in 2007 in Kent.
The
gypsy moth is the worst forest pest ever brought into
the U.S. In its caterpillar form, the pest attacks more
than 500 species of trees and plants. The caterpillar
quickly strips trees and plants of leaves, destroying
some and weakening others so they are susceptible to
plant diseases. The caterpillar destroys wildlife
habitat, degrades water quality and triggers costly
quarantines of timber, agriculture, and nursery
products.
The number of gypsy moths caught
annually in Washington varies widely. The largest number
caught was 1,315 in 1983, and the smallest number was 17
in 2002. Last year, 21 moths were caught. For more
information on Washington's gypsy moth control program,
call the gypsy moth hotline at (800) 443-6684 or visit
the agency's Web site at
agr.wa.gov/PlantsInsects/InsectPests/GypsyMoth
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