Miller Moths

Homesteading & Country Living Forum

Help Support Homesteading & Country Living Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Weedygarden

Awesome Friend
HCL Supporter
Neighbor
Joined
Dec 3, 2017
Messages
20,979
It has been Miller Moth season in Colorado this week. One morning I opened the front door and about a dozen of them flew away. The cat where I've been housesitting has spent a lot of time chasing them.

https://www.denverpost.com/2023/05/18/miller-moths-colorado-migration/?itm_source=parsely-api

Miller moth migration hits Colorado’s Front Range — but they’re not a nuisance, ecologists say

Fuzzy miller moths pick up and spread pollen, crucial for healthy flowers and food crops

Once reviled widely as a nuisance, the millions of miller moths migrating through cities along Colorado’s Front Range this week increasingly are seen as an ecological necessity.

These native moths matter more than ever, entomologists say, because other pollinators, such as bees, are decreasing — which imperils native vegetation and potentially billions of dollars worth of agricultural food crops.

The miller moths (Euxoa auxiliaris) come from Army cutworms, which turn into adult moths on the Eastern Plains before swarming into metro Denver and other urban areas. If not distracted by household and commercial light, each moth typically flies up to 100 miles, moving on into mountain foothills before July.

They’re crucial food for birds, arriving just as newly-hatched chicks need protein. They become a major food source for bears foraging after emerging, hungry, from hibernation. And fuzzy moth bodies pick up and carry pollen from one flower to another, helping native plants survive.

“Pollinators as a whole are trending toward declines, so we should learn how to share our space and welcome miller moths as they pass through,” said Shiran Hershcovich, a manager at the Colorado Butterfly Pavilion, an insect research hub. “Be mindful of your light pollution levels and turn off all unnecessary lights this spring.”

But, in recent years, a different kind of moth — a non-native invader — has been complicating the spring scene and intensifying the buffeting of people inside warm and robustly-lit homes. This European Large Yellow Underwing (Noctua pronuba) comes from caterpillar worms that favor non-native turf lawns and can hang around longer than the native miller moths.

“It may become an issue in the future,” said Colorado State University entomologist Chuck Harp, a researcher based at CSU’s Museum of Arthropod Diversity.

The invaders arrived accidentally from Europe at a port in Nova Scotia in 1979, then spread across the continent, first appearing in Colorado about two decades ago. They reproduce rapidly with multiple broods and are becoming a dominant moth from May until September. The problem: Their worms in turf lawn grass eat ravenously, similar to invasive Japanese beetles, Harp said.

“Their caterpillars are large enough to do damage to gardens,” he said. “This moth can be the most common moth all season… Our yards have non-native plants, and they attract scores of species of non-native insects that feed on them.”

Miller moths are harmless. They don’t carry disease, insect scientists say. They cannot sting or bite, though they’ve developed a defense mechanism called “rectal loading,” and when in distress, can ooze a bitter brown liquid.

Colorado lawmakers have mobilized to try to slow the decline of pollinators in general. Gov. Jared Polis on Wednesday signed into law a pollinator protection bill that limits the use of toxic neonicotinoid pesticides.

It’s unclear whether the number of moths this spring will exceed what was thought to be an intense migration last year. CSU researchers said cold snaps in May, such as those in 2017 and 2019 that included snowstorms, reduce numbers.
Birds benefit from abundant moths.

“Swifts and swallows can be seen at highway intersections swooping to catch these moths as the moths fly out from under cars as they sit at the signal lights,” Harp said.

Moths often rest in the warmth under vehicles and fly off at stoplights — toward birds.

Moths navigate by the sun, moon, and starlight.

When they get to cities and homes, they sense warmth and artificial light, which confuses them.

“We humans have changed their landscape… and they hang around longer than they otherwise would or should,” Hershcovich said. “Our artificial lights blur their built-in navigation system and, instead of following their usual path, they find our homes. When you keep bright lights on throughout the night in your homes and on porches, you’ll likely attract a couple dozen friendly miller moths trying to fly through their ancestral migratory path.”
 
Yep! We have them right now all over the place, too. They even hide in laundry when I take it off the line. I kill at least a dz a day in the house. Little granddaughter freaks out and screams. So maybe they are good because they spread pollen, but they need to be doing it outside. Ha. That article mentioned army cutworms, too, and I had a time with those last year. Same with the sheep raisers around here, as those cutworms can decimate a field of grass in a minute. But I'm ready for them this year.
 
Yep! We have them right now all over the place, too. They even hide in laundry when I take it off the line. I kill at least a dz a day in the house. Little granddaughter freaks out and screams. So maybe they are good because they spread pollen, but they need to be doing it outside. Ha. That article mentioned army cutworms, too, and I had a time with those last year. Same with the sheep raisers around here, as those cutworms can decimate a field of grass in a minute. But I'm ready for them this year.
She is not the only one who freaks out about them. I have read about people that I personally know freaking out. I had one now deceased cousin who would just lose her mind during Miller moth season. I was at my aunt's house after an uncle's funeral, My mother's cousin was there and she used a tissue and grabbed one, with no emotion. She said to me, "Our mothers (her mother was my grandmother's sister) were never bothered by such things as moths. They had more important things to deal with." Yes, they did. My grandmother had to figure out what she was going to feed her family during the Great Depression when they had no money or food. She didn't have the luxury to be freaked out by moths and other insects. That was the least of her worries.
 
It's Boxelder Bug season in Ohio. They can't get in (yet, Hopefully) but they are everywhere outrside.

1684616227009.png
 
I handed little granddaughter a fly swatter and she now feels empowered.
Release The Kraken!!!
We survived luv-bug season. They aren't a problem because they don't fly good 'hooked-up' because one is flying forward and the other one in reverse.
Strangely enough, common house-flies have descended on us in record numbers :dunno: .
Fortunately, I have guns for those.:thumbs:
 
Last edited:
Too funny… years ago a neighbor in upstate NY bought a bug deflector for the hood of his new truck. He got one extra tall, it worked!!!!

The bugs were horrible one week. They all landed in a 8” wide stripe across his windshield, at eye level. He couldn’t see to drive!!! He came home one evening, could hear him cursing in his driveway as he took the deflector off. 🤣 🤣
 
It's Boxelder Bug season in Ohio. They can't get in (yet, Hopefully) but they are everywhere outrside.
Those bugs fill the space around the door frame to the solar battery shed and find their way behind the window screens in our home, they come in the little drain slots just below the screens and I've seen them cover the whole side of light poles. Probably the worst thing they do is suck the juice out of strawberries, peaches and other soft skinned fruits, they are a general PITA.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top