When moths turn away moose

October 25, 2018

Ned Rozell
907-474-7468

Photo by Diane Wagner. The larval stage of a willow leafblotch miner begins to feed on a willow leaf.
Photo by Diane Wagner. The larval stage of a willow leafblotch miner begins to feed on a willow leaf.


While most of Alaska has not felt too wintery yet, 175,000 moose have noticed a change. As biologist Tom Seaton pointed out in last week鈥檚 column, moose are now seeking out what amounts to a large dog-food sack of twigs each day. There are no more pond greens to slurp or succulent leaves to strip from stems.

鈥淚n the winter, all that鈥檚 available is wood,鈥 said ecologist Diane Wagner of the University of Alaska Fairbanks.

Wagner was part of a study on how a tiny moth affects that wood and in turn alters the behavior of moose.

Wagner, graduate student Brian Allman and ecologist Knut Kielland studied a gray moth called the willow leafblotch miner they noticed on the flats of the Tanana River. The tiny larvae of the moth feed on the leaves of the sandbar willow, browning them out by midsummer.

Though the infested leaves look as unappetizing as a wormy apple, moose don鈥檛 eat leaves of the sandbar willow, Wagner said. Winter is when moose, in their quest for 30 pounds of twigs each day, turn to the sandbar willow, which by then has no leaves.

During what made up much of his master鈥檚 degree research, Allman applied insecticide to some stands of sandbar willow on the Tanana River floodplain in late spring. The leaves of those trees stayed green and full, compared to nearby willows with solar panels damaged by the willow leafblotch miner. Unlike the aspen leaf miner, which Wagner also studies, leafblotch miner caterpillars travel from leaf to leaf feeding on the photosynthetic machinery inside.

Photos by Diane Wagner. These leaves show damage done by the willow leafblotch miner.
Photos by Diane Wagner. These leaves show damage done by the willow leafblotch miner.


鈥淚t can blast through all the leaves on a shoot in a few weeks. It鈥檚 a very destructive feeder,鈥 she said.

The researchers found sandbar willows infested with the leaf miners in early summer are not the first choice of moose in winter.

鈥淪tem growth declines with leaf mining,鈥 Wagner said. 鈥淢oose prefer to eat plants with more and bigger stems over those with fewer, twiggy ones. That鈥檚 probably why moose preferred the plants that we sprayed.鈥

On trees from which they excluded willow leafblotch miners with insecticide, whips of new growth were bigger. Those sprigs carry buds that will next spring turn into new shoots with a set of leaves attached.

Though moose were probably unaware of the moth鈥檚 existence, they noticed what it wrought six months later.

鈥淢oose took more wood and a greater proportion of wood from the plants we had sprayed in summer,鈥 Wagner said.

While Tanana River moose seem to hammer them, sandbar willow are just one of Alaska鈥檚 30-plus species of willow that moose eat. Leafblotch miners don鈥檛 attack feltleaf willow, which moose love, because moths can鈥檛 attach their eggs to the fuzz.

Photo by Diane Wagner. Young willows begin to reclaim a sandbar on the Tanana River.
Photo by Diane Wagner. Young willows begin to reclaim a sandbar on the Tanana River.


Wagner thinks the willow leafblotch miner is a newcomer to the Tanana River study site, which hosts one of the densest populations of moose in North America.

鈥淲e don鈥檛 think willow in the area evolved with it,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t looks like a range extension, which could be related to warming.鈥

Wagner and others looked the interaction of willow leafblotch miners and moose as part of a 10-year study of the river valley ecosystem.

鈥淗ow do insect outbreaks like this one affect species people really care about, like moose?鈥

Since the late 1970s, 性欲社' Geophysical Institute has provided this column free in cooperation with the 性欲社 research community. Ned Rozell is a science writer for the Geophysical Institute.