
TAXONOMY:Superfamily: Bombycoidea, Latreille, 1802 |
"WhatAWonderfulWorld" |

Larvae will pupate without soil if placed in the dark in a warm place.
Covered five gallon buckets, lined with paper toweling, make good
pupation chambers.
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The first or second instar larva to the left will quickly move away from one to four siblings to become a solitary feeder on oak, maple, pine, sycamore, Sweet gum, or sassafras, the favorite foods of this species. |
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Larvae still do not consume much in the second and third instars, and they have also been reported to feed upon various cherries, sumacs, birches, willows, and ash trees |
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Third and fourth instar larvae become heavy feeders but seldom do damage
to the many evergreens (softwoods) upon which they also feed: cedar,
fir, (larch/juniper), and pine. |
![]() | Steven
Stone also reports elm,
hickory, hornbeam, chestnut, and privet as foodplants for this highly polphagous species. |

Courtesy of John A. Weidhaas, University of Vermont
The dimorphic wing coloration of this species is especially evident in this gynandromorph which flew in to a black light in Pottersville, New Jersey, in early July of 1962. My father and I got into an argument over whether it was a male or female until he realized and explained what we had captured.

Abies grandis |
Grand fir |
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