including cabbage. “Those eggs hatch into tiny green worms that eat through the layers of cabbage and leave behind droppings between leaves,” says Wilhelmi. The best and simplest solution is ...
They lay eggs on the leaf veins of plants and larvae eat holes in the leaves. Diamondback moths are present throughout the summer. Imported cabbage worms have 1-3 generations per year. They overwinter ...
10% plants infested with 1 or more medium-large imported cabbage worm larvae and cabbage looper eggs or larvae. When diamondback moths are the dominant caterpillar found, or when other caterpillars ...