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Poor Mountain Gypsy Moth Spraying to be Completed Soon |
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Ronald D. Walton
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Late this week or early the following week, 137 acres of remote forestland on Poor Mountain near Roanoke County will be sprayed with Dimilin to control gypsy moths, depending on leaf and larval development and the weather. Small yellow planes with blue stripes are used for the aerial spraying program.
A total of 117 Brush and Gap mountains were sprayed earlier this month with Btk. Montgomery County is participating in the Virginia Gypsy Moth Cooperative Suppression Program to kill gypsy moths in their early caterpillar stage on uninhabited forestland. The Virginia Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services uses the insecticides Bacillus thuringiensis var. kurstaki (Btk) and Dimilin to kill gypsy moths in their early caterpillar stage. Btk is a biological insecticide used in the organic food industry to control caterpillars. Dimilin is a chemical insecticide that is often more effective than Btk. Research indicates direct effects on humans and other mammals are extremely unlikely. Both insecticides are mixed at low concentrations with water for spraying. Montgomery County faces a serious threat to forests, trees and shrubs from the gypsy moth. The County was placed under quarantine last year because of this pest. The caterpillars primarily forage on a variety of oak trees, but attack about 300 plant species. Tree defoliation can be more than 90 percent in areas of high gypsy moth populations.
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