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One family (Sphingidae) of large moths attracts popular interest. It includes hawk or sphinx moths, distinguished by long, narrow wings and rapid flight. Although primarily nocturnal, they often fly at dusk and greatly resemble hummingbirds as they hover, feeding on nectar. Larvae of 2 species, tobacco and tomato hornworms, are occasional crop pests. Another family (Tortricidae) of much smaller moths includes economically important species. The codling moth, a pest of apples, bores into fruit, making it inedible. Spruce budworm, the primary pest of Canada's FOREST industry, sometimes destroys vast acreages of conifers. One of the largest families (Noctuidae) includes the owlet moths (millers) and many economically important larvae (cutworms). Cutworms hide in the surface layer of soil in daytime and feed on young plants at night, often severing stems at the surface. Several pest species occur in Canada, pale western, red-backed and black cutworms being among the most important. The armyworm, another chronic pest, derives its name from larvae that march en masse from one stand of grain to another. Another group of Noctuidae contains species that bore into flowers and fruits (corn earworm, tobacco budworm). Larvae of another large family (Geometridae) are called geometers or inchworms because of their unique means of locomotion. This family includes pest species responsible for defoliation of trees (spring and fall cankerworms). Clothes moths, which occur worldwide, are carried from house to house on clothing or other articles of animal origin. Their natural food is hair, wool and feathers.
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