We. Wallner et al., RESPONSE OF ADULT LYMANTRIID MOTHS TO ILLUMINATION DEVICES IN THE RUSSIAN FAR-EAST, Journal of economic entomology, 88(2), 1995, pp. 337-342
In field studies in the Russian Far East, five types of illuminating d
evices were evaluated for attracting adult gypsy moth, Lymantria dispa
r (L.), pink gypsy moth, L. mathura Moore, and nun moth, L. monacha (L
.). Our objective was to determine if light from commercial lamps suit
ed to out-of-doors floodlighting could be modified to reduce their att
ractiveness to moths without a reduction of illumination. During 17 ni
ghts of tests, fluorescent blacklight lamps captured significantly mor
e adults than either phosphor mercury or high-pressure sodium lamps, C
aptures were slightly higher for phosphor mercury than high-pressure s
odium lamps but both were unattractive to all three lymantriids after
the addition of filters that blocked spectral emissions <480 nm. Daily
temporal periodicity, based on adult captures at lights, resulted in
distinct activity patterns for the three lymantriids. Peak activity fo
r L. dispar was between 2300 and 0100 hours; for L. mathura, 0100-0300
hours; and 0300-0500 hours for L. monacha. Temporal activity patterns
suggest that L. dispar and L. monacha possess nonoverlapping diel rhy
thms, whereas L. mathura overlaps broadly with both L. dispar and L. m
onacha.