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Gypsy Moth Programs

Gus R. Douglass
Commissioner of Agriculture

Email:
douglass@ag.state.wv.us

Message from Commissioner Douglass 
Commissioner Douglass' Biography

Janet Fisher

Janet L. Fisher
Deputy Commissioner

Email:

jfisher@ag.state.wv.us
Steve Miller
Assistant Commissioner

Email:
smiller@ag.state.wv.us

Bob Tabb

Bob Tabb
Deputy Commissioner

Email:
btabb@ag.state.wv.us

Gypsy Moth Program in West Virginia


The gypsy moth is the most serious insect pest ever to invade West Virginia's forests.  The first adult male gypsy moths were trapped in West Virginia in 1972.  The first caterpillars were found in 1978.  Since then this destructive insect has continued to spread, while funding to combat the pest has been difficult to maintain.  These circumstances created the need for a gypsy moth cooperative suppression program for landowners in the generally infested areas in West Virginia. 

The West Virginia Department of Agriculture (WVDA) has two objectives in its Gypsy Moth Program; first, to retard the spread of the pest into non-infested areas of the state through the Gypsy Moth Slow the Spread (STS) Program and, second, to suppress gypsy moth populations in infested areas to limit, as much as possible, defoliation and tree mortality through the WVDA Gypsy Moth Cooperative State County Landowner (CSCL) Program. 

The WVDA CSCL Program is between landowners, the County Commissions in the generally infested counties, the West Virginia University (WVU) Cooperative Extension Service, WVDA, and the United States Department of Agriculture, Forest Service (USDA-FS).  Aerial spraying will be done in the generally infested area on a demand basis only to minimize the damage to forests and reduce the impact of the gypsy moth in future years.  Spraying will not be done with the intent of eradicating the pest. The WVDA will offer gypsy moth treatment with either of two materials, Dimilin or Btk. The landowner may request the use of either material.  However, final approval for use will depend on site evaluation by WVDA.  The site evaluation will determine if an area meets criteria set forth on the label and other possible restrictions.

The goal of the WVDA STS Project is to use novel integrated pest management (IPM) strategies in order to reduce the rate of gypsy moth spread into uninfested areas. WVDA STS Program focuses on low-level populations in the transition zone between areas considered generally infested and generally uninfested. This new IPM strategy is dependent upon intensive monitoring of low moth populations coupled with timely control of growing isolated populations

Any state funds that become available will be used first to treat isolated infestations of the moth, which may occur outside the normal pattern of infestation, and low-density populations on the fringe of the main infestation.  If no such infestations or populations exist in a particular year, any available state funds will be used across the board to treat state lands and reduce the landowner share of the cost in the cooperative program.

For more information on the WVDA Gypsy Moth Program contact Quentin “Butch” Sayers, Assistant Director at New Creek, WV, (304) 788-1066, qsayers@ag.state.wv.us 

             Gypsy Moth Program Brochure                   Egg Mass Survey Request Application

                  

Additional Application Information
Where to Submit Applications

2009 Gypsy Moth Defoliation Map

Gypsy Moth Defoliation

       
Monroe County              Mineral County            Jefferson County

WVDA Gypsy Moth Program Update


2009 WVDA Proposed Treatment Areas

Gypsy Moth Life Stages

         

      Egg Mass                Larva                        Pupa                   Male Moth         Female Moth

 

The mission of the West Virginia Department of Agriculture is to protect plant, animal and human health and the state’s food supply through a variety of scientific and regulatory programs; to provide vision, strategic planning and emergency response for agricultural and other civil emergencies; to promote industrial safety and protect consumers through educational and regulatory programs; and to foster economic growth by promoting West Virginia agriculture and agribusinesses throughout the state and abroad.

West Virginia Department of Agriculture
1900 Kanawha Boulevard, East
State Capitol, Room E-28
Charleston, WV 25305-0170
304/558-2201; 304/558-2203 (fax)

©2001, 2002 West Virginia Department of Agriculture, All Rights Reserved