It is a non-native species and therefore has fewer predators.
Robert W. Campbell has written: 'Gypsy moth' -- subject(s): Gypsy moth 'Tree condition and mortality following defoliation by the gypsy moth' -- subject(s): Defoliation, Diseases and pests, Gypsy moth, Trees 'Forest stand responses to defoliation by the gypsy moth' -- subject(s): Defoliation, Disease and pest resistance, Food, Forest ecology, Gypsy moth, Physiology, Trees 'The analysis of numerical change in gypsy moth populations' -- subject(s): Gypsy moth, Insect populations, Mathematical models 'Day-to-day survival of late-instar western spruce budworm larvae and pupae' -- subject(s): Insects, Larvae, Pupae, Western spruce budworm 'Forecasting gypsy moth egg-mass density / by Robert W. Campbell' -- subject(s): Gypsy moth, Insect populations
Gypsy moth caterpillars can damage trees by eating their leaves. The city of Chicago has maintained a pest control strategy that has so far prevented gypsy moths from causing many problems in Chicago.
The gypsy moth is in the AnimaliaKingdom.
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What Are Gypsy Moths?The Gypsy Moth is a moth from Europe and North Africa. It defoliates shrubs and trees, often killing them. The first gypsy moths in America escaped from a lab in Massachusetts. They are migrating westward. Save your plants from gypsy moth damage.Read about the moth's life cycle and how you can protect your trees. Tree owners need to know what to watch for and how to destroy the moths, their eggs, and their larvae. These hungry insects can strip a tree in one night!www.associatedcontent.com/article/5406372/what_are_gypsy_moths.html
Um, no it grows up to be a Gypsy Moth.
well to decrease the population of the gypsy moth we are useing a spray that is called get rid of gypsy moth you should try it
Good question.The Gypsy Moth was a type of moth that is common to England. The de Havilland DH 60 was first called simply as a "Moth". Maybe it was named this because its wings could be folded alongside the fuselage.In 1928 when the new de Havilland Gipsy I engine was installed did the airplane become the "Gypsy Moth".Actually, the gypsy moth, Lymantria dispar, has never been a common moth in England. It isn't clear to me if this question is about the moth or the airplane...
The gypsy moth (Lymantria dispar) originates from Europe and Asia.
If a gypsy moth is an insect (which it probably is) than it would have 6 legs like all other insects.
They are nests of gypsy moth caterpillars. They can strip a tree of all of its leaves in a matter of days, killing the trees.
Melody A. Keena has written: 'Effects of laboratory rearing on gypsy moth (Lepidoptera: Lymantriidae)' -- subject(s): Gypsy moths as laboratory animals, Insect rearing, Gypsy moth, Variation 'Identification of gypsy moth larval color forms' -- subject(s): Gypsy moth, Identification, Larvae