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1 Light Brown Apple Moth TONY SAUNDERS-DAVIES
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2 Light Brown Apple Moth Lepidoptera, Tortricidae, Epiphyas postvittana Male left, Female right Ian F. Smith
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3 Light Brown Apple Moth Young Egg Mass Near-mature Larva Pupa Leaf Rolling for Pupation HortResearch, New Zealand. Ian F. Smith HortResearch, New Zealand.
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4 Light Brown Apple Moth Some notable trees are apple, pear, peach, apricot, nectarine, citrus, persimmon, cherry, almond, avocado, oak, willow, walnut, poplar, cottonwood, coast redwood, pine, and eucalyptus. Some common shrub and herbaceous hosts are grape, kiwifruit, strawberry, berries (blackberry, blueberry, boysenberry, raspberry), corn, pepper, tomato, pumpkin, beans, cabbage, carrot, alfalfa, rose, camellia, jasmine, chrysanthemum, clover, and plantain. www.aphis.usda.gov/.../lba_moth/gallery.shtml
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5 LBAM Damage & Control HortResearch, New Zealand Ian F. Smith http://www.cdfa.ca.gov/phpps/PDEP/lbam/lbam_main.html Control: Bacillus thuringiensis. CDFA using Check-Mate OLR-F pheromone to disrupt mating http://www.tortricidae.com/lbam.asp feeding damage on strawberry Feeding damage on pear
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6 Light Brown Apple Moth Bio - Control Dolichogenidea tasmanica & Goniozus jacintae, parasitoids of lightbrown apple moth larvae, are used to control LBAM in Australia & New Zealand. Goniozus jacintae Spiders Earwigs
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