Hungry caterpillars stripping trees in Quebec, Ontario and on Montreal’s Mount Royal
MONTREAL — Biologists are tracking a bumper crop of hungry caterpillars that are eating their way through some of Quebec and Ontario’s best-known green spaces, raining down excrement on the forest floor and leaving bald, leafless trees in their wake.
The gypsy moth caterpillars have been especially present on Montreal’s Mount Royal, where almost all the large oaks at the summit have lost half or more of their leaves, according to a group dedicated to protecting the mountain.
“It’s something we’ve never seen on this level,” Antonin St-Jean, with Les amis de la montagne, said in an interview Wednesday, adding that while the deforestation is unsightly, there’s little the group can do.
André-Philippe Drapeau Picard, an entomologist with the Montreal Insectarium, says the caterpillar’s population tends to rise and fall in cycles, and that mild temperatures last winter likely contributed to higher-than-average numbers this year. The caterpillars, he added, don’t usually cause permanent damage to healthy trees but can impact those that were already sick or weak.

