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Woolly
Bear Caterpillar Moth "Banded Woolly Bear"
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| Description |
Wingspan 1 5/8-2".
Fore wings yellow-brown with a series or row of small black dots. Hind
wings slightly paler, slightly pinkish with several indistinct gray dots.
Abdomen has 3 black spots above on rear edge of each segment. Caterpillar,
to 2 1/8", is black, covered with stiff bristles, and has a broad
band of red-brown bristles around the middle.
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| Habitat |
Meadows, pastures, uncultivated
fields, and road edges.
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| Range |
Throughout North America,
except northern Canada.
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| Food |
Caterpillar feeds on low
herbaceous plants of many kinds, mostly wild; it seldom attacks crops
or ornamentals.
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| Flight |
June-August in the North,
February-November in the South.
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Other
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Familiar since Colonial times as the "Woolly Bear," the caterpillar is often seen crossing roads and patch on warm days in late fall. According to superstition, the amount of black in the caterpillar's bristle coating forecasts the severity of the coming winter. Actually, the caterpillar is to full growth before autumn weather stimulates it to seek a winter shelter. |