![]() I have two live oak trees in front of my house, both are about 15 years old. I've lived in the house for 4 years now. This year they have a web-like covering on the trunks and branches. It started about a month ago, and has been spreading. Is it caused by anything that can do damage to the trees? If so, what is the best way to treat this? (If it is not damaging to the trees, I'll just leave it alone.)
The Pseudocaeciliitae are much smaller in size, duller in color and adults bear wings. The species most noticeable, Archkipsocus nomas Gurney, makes unsightly silken webs on tree trunks and branches These webs can completely wrap a tree's trunk to the tips of each branch. Underneath this protective webbing, the barklice feed on lichens and fungi. Host trees commonly include oaks and pecans, although any tree with lichen and fungal growth on the bark can support a barklouse population. Silk-wrapped trees harboring this barklouse appear to occur at specific periods of the summer (July and August) when conditions are favorable for their development. The appearance of webbing often causes concern to homeowners and landscape maintenance personnel that are not familiar with this insect. Pseudocaeciliid barklice are harmless to trees and no insecticides are recommended for their control. Once silken webbing appears, it will not be removed by chemical treatments. If removal of the silk is desired, it may be removed using spray of water under high pressure. Left undisturbed, these barklice apparently remove the silken webbing at the end of the summer. However, an observation has been made in pecan orchards that the use of fungicides will kill lichens. Lichens are, of course, symbiotic associations of an algae and a fungus. One cannot survive without the other. Without lichens, barklice will have nothing on which to feed and thus populations will fail to develop. |