About 2,900 acres of trees in New Jersey - nearly three times the number affected last year - have been defoliated by gypsy moth caterpillars, according to a statewide aerial survey released Friday. But the number is small compared with years such as 2008, when more than 339,000 acres were damaged by the leaf-eating invasive pests, state officials said. "While we have seen very low gypsy moth populations over the last few years, we must continue intense surveillance as well as treatment to suppress this damaging insect," state Secretary of Agriculture Douglas H. Fisher said.
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