These very hungry caterpillars are eating WA forests — and fueling wildfires

Tussock moth caterpillars are stripping fir trees throughout the state. To keep our trees healthy, the U.S. Forest Service is fighting back with a spray-on virus straight out of sci-fi.

Meet the tussock moth caterpillar. (Photo by Connie Mehmel/U.S. Forest Service)

The tussock moth caterpillar is quite the sight, if you’ve ever seen one hanging around a Douglas fir tree. Its brightly colored body is covered in fuzz, with tufts of hair on its back.

“The caterpillars are really quite attractive,” said Connie Mehmel, a forest entomologist with the U.S. Forest Service. “They’re very colorful. They have a pair of hairs on either side of their heads that look like horns.”

But about every 10 years, Mehmel starts seeing too many of these native insects. Too many can be a bad thing.

These hungry caterpillars can eat Douglas fir and grand fir needles, starting with the new needles that grow as the caterpillars hatch, later munching on older needles high in the treetops.

“These caterpillars, when there are a lot of them in the forest, they really can strip a tree from top to bottom. When a tree loses all of its needles in a single year, that tree will usually die,” Mehmel said.

That can mean a lot of dead standing trees, which could fuel large wildfires, Mehmel said. In that way, the situation is similar to a bark beetle infestation. It can also be dangerous for people recreating in forests, which is why attempts are made to treat outbreaks in high-use areas before the caterpillars damage trees.

To prevent too many trees from dying, the Forest Service sprays goop that’s toxic only to tussock moth caterpillars — it doesn’t even affect other insects, Mehmel said. The mixture is made up of a virus that’s been grown and turned into a powder, combined with water and molasses.

Caterpillars eat the sticky mixture and become infected. When infected caterpillars die, their remains spread the virus onto nearby fir needles.

“Other caterpillars come along and eat it and get the virus. And it causes one after another to die, which will cause the population to collapse. Once that happens, we usually don’t see them again for another 10 years or more,” Mehmel said.

This year’s outbreak occurred mainly near Blewett Pass in Central Washington. Two other campgrounds (one in the Methow Valley and one near Fish Lake) also saw a lot of tussock moth caterpillars.

Oregon has recently seen an increase in tussock moth caterpillars just north of Bend and in parts of northeastern Oregon, said Karen Ripley, an entomologist with the Forest Service based in Portland.

Ripley said about 9,400 acres in those areas showed signs of tussock moth defoliation last year. Officials in Oregon haven’t surveyed those areas yet, but they expect the same defoliation or potentially an increase in downed fir needles this year, Ripley said.

This summer in Washington, researchers used helicopters to spray the virus into the tops of the trees, where the moths lay their eggs. They sprayed a little more than 500,000 acres over two days in June.

Now, they’re watching to make sure the sprayed caterpillars die. They expect most of the sprayed caterpillars to die by the end of the first week in July.

It wasn’t always so easy to stop these outbreaks, said Mehmel, who began her forest health career studying tussock moths 42 years ago.

The last serious outbreak, what Mehmel called the “outbreak from hell,” happened in the mid-1970s. Tussock moth caterpillars showed up across Northwest forests — from Northern California up to British Columbia and into Montana.

Then, researchers used the toxic pesticide DDT on about half of the affected acres.

“That was the last time DDT was ever used on the national forest,” Mehmel said. The Forest Service had to get special permission to spray the insecticide because it had already been banned by the Environmental Protection Agency.

That’s when research began to find the virus mixture used today, which was manufactured by a lab in Corvallis, Oregon.

In the next few weeks, Mehmel said hikers may see downed needles in areas near the outbreak.

“We have seen some new defoliation since the spray, but we’re also seeing that insects are starting to die,” Mehmel said.

As you’re hiking, she said, be sure not to touch or pick up the caterpillars. Most people are allergic to the caterpillar's sharp hairs, which Mehmel said look like tiny harpoons under a microscope. 

People can get rashes from the hairs touching their skin or even have respiratory problems if there are a lot of hairs floating about.

“If there are a lot of caterpillars, and their hairs are in the air, personally, my eyes always get really itchy,” Mehmel said. “Most people are allergic, and they can really cause skin irritations.”

You can help entomologists monitor the tussock moth caterpillars if you see them. Letting local ranger districts know about caterpillar sightings can help researchers know when and where the next outbreak might happen.

“It is hard to predict,” Mehmel said. “When a population only builds up rarely, and it’s hard to find in between [outbreaks], it’s hard to study.”

This story originally appeared on Oregon Public Broadcasting.

Please support independent local news for all.

We rely on donations from readers like you to sustain Crosscut's in-depth reporting on issues critical to the PNW.

Donate

About the Authors & Contributors