It's time to band your trees against cankerworms, says City of Regina

City sprayed roughly 13,900 trees this year for cankerworms and tent caterpillars

Image | elm tree band regina march 21 2016

Caption: The bands are made out of a strip of insulation, surrounded by plastic and a sticky substance. (Craig Saunders/CBC)

Now is the right time to start banding your trees to protect them from cankerworms, say city officials.
"The reason we band the trees is to start to catch the female cankerworms, who will be starting to emerge shortly for her egg-laying cycle," said Russell Eirich, the city's manager of forestry, pest control and horticulture.
Eirich recommends residents band their elm, fruit and maple trees now to avoid spring cankerworms.

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The city sprayed roughly 13,900 trees for cankerworms and tent caterpillars this year at an average cost of $3 per tree.
Cankerworms are a defoliating insect, so they eat the leaves of the tree, eventually killing the tree.