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The False codling moth presents a problem to the citrus industry.
If most of the fruit developed to harvest size, the worms are probably codling moth.
The False codling moth is adapted for warm climate survival.
Lead was also used in pesticides before the 1950s, when fruit orchards were treated especially against the codling moth.
However, in some locations the False codling moth has developed some resistance.
Mating disruption can be used to effectively manage codling moth populations in many cases.
His business suffered badly when the Codling moth appeared in the state, devastating the apple crop.
These three or four sprays also thwart codling moth, a pest active most of the season.
In temperate climates, the codling moth causes extensive damage, especially to fruit farms.
Codling moth infestations are often managed with pesticides.
Prevention is the preferred practice when dealing with the False Codling Moth.
Codling moths and apple maggots are two other pests which affect apple trees.
The False codling moth experiences four life stages; egg, larva, pupa, and adult.
The codling moth caterpillar eats apples and pears.
The three major insect pests are apple maggot, codling moth and plum curculio.
In addition, trees covered in kaolin clay can make them less recognizable as habitat to codling moths.
The prime difficulty in dealing with codling moth infestations seems to lie with appropriate timing.
The larvae have a less selective diet than the Codling moth, which feeds primarily on temperate fruit crops.
All stages of fruit development of citrus are susceptible to a False codling moth infestation.
The establishment of a False Codling Moth population results in increased pesticide usage.
The moth is related to some serious pests, like the codling moth and the hickory shuck worm, he said.
Crevices formed where old bark is flaking off provide refuge for pests like the larvae of codling moths.
The sparrows were brought to do battle with the codling moth, which had inflicted alarming damage to Utah's fruit crops for several seasons.
It looked to residents as if the sparrow's "eternal hostility to the codling moth" was just the ticket to saving the territory's fruit crop.
The coding moth (Cydia pomonella ) granulosis virus is illustrated in Fig. 2.
The codling moth (Cydia pomonella) is a member of the Lepidopteran family Tortricidae.
Codling moth (Cydia pomonella)
Codling moth (Cydia pomonella) larvae eat walnut kernels, as well as apple and pear seeds.
One approach to circumvent the negative effects associated with the high radio-resistance of Lepidoptera pests has been the use of inherited sterility or F1 sterility, first documented in studies on the codling moth (Cydia pomonella).