Dioryctria spp.
Pest description and damage Adult coneworms are mottled gray snout moths banded with subtle colors. The coneworm larvae are small and cream-colored or light brown with a darker head. Coneworms attack true firs by boring into shoot tips or stems, especially around wounds, and feeding on the soft bark tissues. The portion of the branch beyond the injured point may die back. Coneworms also may bore into green cones, feed on the soft bark of young growth, or feed inside the bark on the trunk cambium. Confounding the issue are insects of other orders that attack cones and several small moths that bore into shoots.
For biology, life history, monitoring and management
See:
Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga)-Coneworm
Management-chemical control
See Table 4 in: