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Coneworm and shoot moth

47 host plants

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Host Plants
GDD Threshold
Peak Activity
Damage Severity
Monitoring
Regional Notes

Coneworm and shoot moth larvae feed inside pine and fir cones and new shoot tips, causing the tips to bend, discolor, and fail to elongate properly. You will see wilted, reddish-brown shoots with entry holes surrounded by resin. Damage appears in early summer on ponderosa pine, lodgepole pine, and other conifers across Western Washington. Heavily infested trees can lose significant shoot production, reducing growth and deforming tree form.

Prune out infested shoots below the damage and dispose in sealed containers; do not chip or compost. Remove and destroy heavily infested cones before moths emerge in late summer. Maintain tree vigor through adequate water and avoid stress; healthy trees can tolerate moderate damage. Pheromone traps help monitor population timing for potential insecticide applications on high-value trees. Most landscape conifers tolerate shoot loss well enough that active management is unnecessary.

Quick Reference

Host Plants
47

Host Plants (47)

Pinus albicaulis Whitebark Pine, Scrub Pine, White Pine Pinus aristata Bristlecone Pine, Rocky Mountain Bristlecone Interior Bristlecone Pinus attenuata Knobcone Pine Pinus banksiana Jack Pine, Scrub Pine, Banksian Pine, Hudson Bay Pine Pinus bungeana Lacebark Pine, Whitebark Pine, Baipi Song Pinus canariensis Canary Island Pine Pinus cembra Swiss Stone Pine Pinus contorta Lodgepole Pine Pinus contorta var. contorta Shore Pine Pinus contorta var. latifolia Rocky Mountain Lodgepole Pine Pinus coulteri Coulter Pine, Bigcone Pine Pinus densiflora Japanese Red Pine Pinus edulis Pinyon Pine, Piñón Pine, Two-needle Pinyon Colorado Pinyon Pinus elliottii Slash Pine, Swamp Pine Pinus flexilis Limber Pine, Rocky Mountain White Pine Pinus halepensis Aleppo Pine, Jerusalem Pine Pinus heldreichii Bosnian Pine, Snakeskin Pine Pinus jeffreyi Jeffrey Pine, Western Yellow Pine, Bull Pine Pinus kwangtungensis Kwangtung Pine, Guangdong Pine Pinus lambertiana Sugar Pine Pinus leucodermis Bosnian Pine Pinus monophylla Singleleaf Pinon Pine, One-leaved Pine Pinus monticola Western White Pine Pinus mugo Mugo Pine Pinus mugo var. pumilio Mugo pine, Dwarf Mugo pine Pinus nigra Austrian Pine Pinus parviflora Japanese White Pine Pinus parvifola Pinus parvifola Pinus pinaster Maritime Pine, Cluster Pine, Turpentine Pine Pinus pinea Italian Stone Pine, Umbrella Pine Pinus ponderosa Ponderosa Pine, Western Yellow Pine Pinus pumila Japanese Stone Pine, Dwarf Siberian Pine Pinus radiata Monterey Pine Pinus resinosa Red Pine Pinus sabiniana Gray Pine, Foothill Pine Pinus strobiformis Southwestern White Pine, Mexican White Pine, Chihuahua White Pine Pinus strobus Eastern White Pine Pinus sylvestris Scots Pine, Scotch Pine Pinus thunbergii Japanese Black Pine Pinus virginiana Virginia Pine, Scrub Pine, Jersey Pine Pinus wallichiana Himalayan Pine, Bhutan Pine Pinus yunnanensis Yunnan Pine Tsuga canadensis Canadian Hemlock, Eastern Hemlock Tsuga canadensis var. pendula Weeping Hemlock Tsuga diversifolia Northern Japanese Hemlock Tsuga heterophylla Western Hemlock Tsuga mertensiana Mountain Hemlock