Guardian Nature School Team Contact Blog Project Noah Facebook Project Noah Twitter

A worldwide community photographing and learning about wildlife

Join Project Noah!
nature school apple icon

Project Noah Nature School visit nature school

Fall webworm

Hyphantria cunea

Description:

Fall webworm moth

Habitat:

Tree limbs

Notes:

The fall webworms were all over mine and my neighbor's yard last fall, at that time they did not have the hair. There were thousands of them. It's almost July and they now have the hair.

Species ID Suggestions



Sign in to suggest organism ID

1 Comment

Hello adtract2u and Welcome to the Project Noah community!
We hope you like the website as much as we do. There are many aspects to the site and community. The best way to get started is to read the FAQs at http://www.projectnoah.org/faq where you can find all the tips, advice and "rules" of Project Noah. You, like the rest of the community, will be able to suggest IDs for species that you know (but that have not been identified), and make useful or encouraging comments on other users' spottings (and they on yours).
There are also "missions" you can join and add spottings to. See http://www.projectnoah.org/missions . A mission you should join is the https://www.projectnoah.org/missions/219... to chose the "best wildlife photo of 2019",only the spottings added to that mission are eligible.Note that most missions are "local". Be sure not to add a spotting to a mission that was outside of mission boundaries or theme :) Each mission has a map you may consult showing its range. We also maintain a blog archive http://blog.projectnoah.org/ where we have posted previous articles from specialists from different geographical areas and categories of spottings, as well as wildlife "adventures".
So enjoy yourself, share, communicate, learn. See you around :)

adtract2u
Spotted by
adtract2u

Mesquite, Texas, USA

Spotted on Jun 25, 2019
Submitted on Jun 25, 2019

Related Spottings

Fall Webworm Fall webworm Fall webworm Fall webworm

Nearby Spottings

Spotting Spotting Muscovy Duck Oak tree
Noah Guardians
Noah Sponsors
join Project Noah Team

Join the Project Noah Team