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It is commonly referred to as the cherry leaf roller.
There are several ways to manage infestations of the Leaf Roller caterpillars.
Species include the oak leaf roller (A. semiferanus), and other notorious pests.
The Attelabinae are the true leaf rollers.
The caterpillar larvae are leaf rollers, leaf tiers and leafminers.
Alternating between the treatment options for management of the Leaf Roller caterpillars can help to spare beneficial insects.
Other beetles are leaf rollers, biting sections of leaves to cause them to curl inwards, then laying their eggs, thus protected, inside.
The larva is a leaf miner in the early stage, and a leaf roller in the late stage.
Cabbage leaf roller
Fruit tree leaf roller
Larvae are leaf rollers, leaf tiers or leaf miners.
Rose leaf roller (Archips rosana)
She uses various forms of spores and soap to control predators like aphids, mites, leaf rollers and psylla.
The gall tick, the leaf roller, the gypsy moth and the commashaped scale also cause damages to sea buckthorn.
Canna Leaf Roller
The Cherry Leaf Roller (Caloptilia serotinella) is a moth of the Gracillariidae family.
Oak leafroller (or Oak leaf roller) can refer to several species of moth that feed on leaves and roll them for nests:
Long-palped tortrix (Vine leaf roller) (Sparganothis pilleriana)
Damage is often associated with lepidopteran leaf rollers, leaf-folders and hispa beetles, since bacteria readily enter the damaged tissue caused by insect infestation.
Vines are also vulnerable to insect infestations, including root knot nematodes, two-spotted spider mites, leaf rollers, thrips, and Japanese beetles.
Phycitinae caterpillars are mostly leaf rollers, but some are inquilines in plant galls or seed feeders, and a wide range of habitats are utilized.
Cannas are largely free of pests, but in the USA plants sometimes fall victim the Canna Leaf Roller, which can actually be two different insects.
The Fig-tree Skeletonizer moth or Fig Leaf Roller (Choreutis nemorana) is a species of moth of the Choreutidae family.
The larvae of most species feed on living plants either internally or externally as leaf rollers, leaf webbers leaf miners, borers, root feeders, and seed feeders.
Notable finds included a Nine Bark Leaf Roller, an insect never-before identified in Connecticut, and the rare Tiger Beetle and Clubtail Dragonfly.
Tortrix is a genus of moths belonging to the Tortricidae family.
The Endotheniini are a tribe of tortrix moths.
Epinotia is a very large genus of tortrix moths (family Tortricidae).
The Tortricinae are the nominate subfamily of tortrix moths.
It takes leaf miner grubs and green tortrix moths (Tortricidae).
The bud (e) has been burrowed into by the tortrix moth, and if it opens at all will be badly damaged.
It is suspected to provide food for the caterpillars of the tortrix moth Phtheochroa rugosana.
Flax Tortrix complex (more than 5 species)
The Flax Tortrix is part of a cryptic species complex, and its taxonomy has been quite confused.
It used to be thought to be related to that family, and was known as the Large Marbled Tortrix.
Arotrophora is a genus of tortrix moth.
Tortricidae is a family of moths, commonly known as tortrix moths, in the order Lepidoptera.
The tortrix moth genus Cerata is considered a junior synonym of Cydia.
The Rose Tortrix (Archips rosana) is a moth of the Tortricidae family.
Fruit tree tortrix moth (Archips podana)
Barred fruit tree tortrix moth (Pandemis cerasana)
Many of the economically important pests among the tortrix moths belong to this tribe, for example the Light brown apple moth and the spruce budworms.
Syricoris lacunana, the Dark Strawberry Tortrix, is a small moth species of the family Tortricidae.
As invalidly established by J. Hübner in 1825, this refers to the tortrix moth genus Cydia.
Cydia is a large genus of tortrix moths, belonging to the tribe Grapholitini of subfamily Olethreutinae.
Long-palped tortrix (Vine leaf roller) (Sparganothis pilleriana)
This can also be a misspelling of Phlaeodes, nowadays a junior synonym of the tortrix moth genus Epinotia.
T. officinale is food for the caterpillars of several Lepidoptera (butterflies and moths), such as the tortrix moth Celypha rufana.
Other common names are Fruit-tree Tortrix and Vine Tortrix.
It is commonly known as "Acorn Moth", but this can also refer to the tortrix moth Cydia splendana from Europe.