Talk:Pine processionary/GA1

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GA Review[edit]

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Reviewer: Jens Lallensack (talk · contribs) 08:54, 9 October 2021 (UTC)[reply]


Reviewing now. --Jens Lallensack (talk) 08:54, 9 October 2021 (UTC)[reply]

  • The species is one of the few insects where the larva develops in winter. – But that must depend on the climate zone? It is certainly not true in the tropics.
    • Fixed.
  • as described in 1916 by the French entomologist Jean-Henri Fabre. – doesn't become clear in the lead why this is relevant. Remove, or include as a sentence on its own after discussing the Greeks?
    • Done.
  • Dioscorides noted – introduce this person? "Greek physician" or similar? Also, link to the article, not the redirect.
    • Done.
  • Dioscorides noted the urtication – link urtication?
    • Linked.
  • pityocampes – shouldn't it be "pityocampa", and have the generic name with it? If it is the original Greek name, maybe remove the italics to make this clear?
    • Reformatted; yes, it's the original Greek.
  • The French entomologist Jean-Henri Fabre conducted a famous study – "famous" seems unsourced (the study itself can't source this). (edit: seems that just adding source [3] here in addition might solve it).
    • Repeated the ref.
  • They burrow underground, pupate, and emerge in summer. – German Wikipedia has a sourced statement saying that they may already appear in mid May.
    • Edited.
  • The species flies from May to July. – Shouldn't this be discussed where the life cycle is discussed? Seems out of place where it is. Also, could you check other sources if this is information is correct and up-to-date? According to Inaturalist, the peak seems to be in August instead: [1] (which can't, of course, be used as a source, but it raises suspicion). Maybe also add in which months it peaks.
    • Edited.
  • Throughout its life cycle, an individual makes several shelters. – Would be nice to add the function of these shelters. Protection from predators? I think they are active during the night (when they are outside the shelter for feeding). Important to add?
    • Added.
  • Any hypotheses on what the processions are fore? Why not searching for pupation sites on their own?
    • The sources describe rather than speculate.
  • orthopteran – link? Or simply say "cricket" to be more accessible to lay people?
    • Linked.
  • Older methods used insecticides in oil, inserted directly into nests, or mechanical removal of nests. – "Older" means not in use anymore? Maybe "conventional" is the better word?
    • Reworded.
  • I don't see any description of the larvae?
    • Added.
  • How to distinguish the adults from similar species?
    • Added.
  • Distribution seems to be missing completely. Both geographical and altitude.
    • Added both.
  • How many eggs per nest?
    • An "enormous number", per ref.
  • Are adults attracted to light?
    • It's not mentioned in the sources; they may well be, as many moths are.
  • Anything on the subspecies Traumatocampa pityocampa orana?
    • Added in Distribution.
  • I found it problematic that the article says the species causes "damage to forests", when I'm not sure if we can speak of damage from an ecological point of view in a healthy forest where the species occurs naturally. Because the forest is the ecosystem as a whole which includes this insect. I would always make clear that "economic damage" is meant.
    • Fixed.