Title: Emerald Ash Borer: Review and Update
1Emerald Ash Borer Review and Update
- Mark H. Shour, Ph.D.
- ISUE Pest Management Environment Program
- March 2008
2Origins
- First found summer 2002 in Detroit, MI
researchers suspect insect was introduced in
during the 1990s. - Probable origin northeastern China, Korea,
Mongolia, Japan, Taiwan, eastern Russia
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4Hosts and Relatives
- Known hosts limited to green, white, black, and
blue ash trees - Related to the two-lined chestnut borer and
bronze birch borer - Successful invader of healthy trees
5Life Cycle
Mating and Eggs
Larvae
Pupae
Adults
Jodi Ellis, Purdue University
6Adult emerald ash borer
Small insects ½ long x 1/16 wide
7Rob Meinders, USDA APHIS PPQ
8Maturation feeding on ash leaflets
C. Sadof, Purdue University
crenulation
D. McCullough, Michigan State
9Colorful top of abdomen may aid in mate
recognition at close range
10After feeding mating,
female lays single eggs on or just under bark.
Usually 60-90 eggs per female.
11Larval feeding slowly kills the tree because it
cant circulate nutrients.
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14Larvae spend the winter under the bark and pupate
in the spring
15Adults emerge May through August
D-shaped emergence hole
Jodi Ellis, Purdue University
16EAB Symptoms
- Crown thinning/ dieback
- Epicormic sprouting
- Bark splitting over larval activity
- D-shaped emergence holes are often in the upper
portion of a tree - Woodpecker activity
17Thinning crown dieback
18Epicormic sprouting
19Young landscape trees
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22Woodpecker activity
23Potential for EAB spread
- Natural Spread by Adult Flight
- 1st estimate ½ mile/year from brood trees
- 2004 research 1 mile mated females fly further
than males or unmated females - IL effort 1½ miles from source
- IA plan 2-mile radius for searching
24Artificial Spread of EAB
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26The estimated potential national impact of EAB
is a value loss of 20-60 billion. USDA
Forest Services National Urban Forests Iowa
estimates are 3-5 billion. Iowa Department of
Natural Resources
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28What Iowans Should Do
- Report any symptomatic ash trees to the IDALS
State Entomologist, ISU Extension Entomology, or
IDNR Forestry - Keep updated by visiting EAB Web site
- www.emeraldashborer.info
- Realize other borer species will colonize
declining ash trees
29Ash/Lilac Borer
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32Redheaded ash borer
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35EAB Survey Efforts in Iowa
- Iowa State University Extension
- Iowa DNR Forestry Bureau
- Iowa Dept. Ag Land Stewardship
- US Forest Service
- US Dept Ag Plant Protection Quarantine service
36Iowas 2004 and 2005 EAB Work
- Visual surveys all 99 counties in towns gt 1000
persons - Visited registered sawmills
- IDALS nursery inspections
- Sentinel trees (12 sites, 2005)
- EAB Readiness Plan
37Iowas 2006 EAB Work
- Visual surveys at state, county campgrounds
- Posters at IDOT rest areas
- Information to ISUE county offices, private
campgrounds, County Conservation Boards - IDALS nursery inspections
- Sentinel trees (68 trees, 15 sites)
- Displays at State Fair, Farm Progress
38EAB work 2007
- Visual survey of all private, state, federal, and
the largest county campgrounds - 400 campgrounds visited
- 1102 trees visually examined
- 232 sentinel trees on 58 sites
- Use of 100 sticky experimental traps
39USDA traps
- Ames
- Bettendorf
- Clinton
- Cedar Rapids
- Davenport
- Des Moines
- Dubuque
- Iowa City
- Newton
- Waterloo
40EAB in Iowa??
- Emerald ash borer was NOT found
- Will be surveyed again in 2008
- Visual surveys at federal, state, county and
private campgrounds - 400 sentinel trees
- More than 1,100 sticky traps
- Inspection of wood product sites and ornamental
nursery stock
41Acknowledgements
- Deborah McCullough, David Cappaert, and David
Smitley (Michigan State) - Therese Poland (USDA-FS)
- Dan Herms (Ohio State)
- Bugwood Images
- Michigan Department of Agriculture
- USDA - APHIS