Depends on if you want 1 hornworm or if you want 150 wasps. I think you can pluck them off at this point, just get fine tweezers. Worst you can do is kill the hornworm, and if you do nothing he's as good as dead already.Thanks i kind of figured it was some kind of parasite, are they easy to get off or should i just leave it be.
It's funny apparently these hornworms are quite the pest and people revere these wasps as a godsend. Parasite or no, they are considered beneficial =DI would put into the freezer. I kill parasites when I get the chance.
I'm not familiar with any "non pest" caterpillar, or even a method other than arbitrary/aesthetic that one could separate caterpillars in to two groups like that. Maybe the monarch?Sadly the wasps attack other caterpillars that arent pests.
I think I could just as easily accept silkworms as the sole non-pest as I could dismiss them outright since they can only exist in captivity. If they are dismissed, I think all caterpillars are pests. Or put another way, all caterpillars that can even possibly live in the wild are pests. The examples above I see as examples of where their damage is lower than "normal" because their population is under control, but their behavior is still pest-like.Caterpillars cause billions of agricultural damage a year, with only a few that are beneficial. Even though they grow into butterflies and moths which pollinate they do FAR more harm than good.
http://www.plumasnews.com/index.php/12840-caterpillar-invasion-sparks-wildfire-worries-for-plumas-residents#!/ccomment-comment356
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