Title: Update on EAB and Other Invasive Species
1Update on EAB and Other Invasive Species
Why Trees Matter Forum October 22, 2009
Amy Stone and Joe Boggs Ohio State University
Extension
2Insect Pests Imported From Other Countries Many
Names
- Non-Native Pests
- Non-Native Invasive Pests
- Introduced Pests
- Alien Invaders
- Exotic Pests
3Insect Pests Imported From Other Countries Many
Names
- Referred to by many names
- All essentially mean the same thing
- They did not evolve here
- They have few if any natural enemies
- Their U.S. hosts have little or no tolerance
4Notable Bad Apples
- Gypsy Moth, Lymantria dispar
- Japanese Beetle, Popillia japonica
- Asian Longhorned Beetle, Anoplophora glabripennis
- Emerald Ash Borer, Agrilus planipennis
2002
1916
1870
1996
5The Popular View
6Non-Native Pests
7In other words
Think about it
gather information, then react to the specific
situation!
8How Do Non-Native Pests Spread?
- Let's Talk About Natural Spread
9Consider how Forest Fires Spread
Hot Spot Zone
Main Fire Zone
- Forest Fires Spread Two Ways
- Along a fire front at the edge of the main fire
- By leapfrogging with hot spots
10How Non-Native Pests Spread
Transition Zone
Non-infested Zone
Infested Zone
- Non-Native Insect Pests Spread like a Forest
Fire - Along a main front at the edge of the infested
zone - By leapfrogging with hot spots
11A Perfect Segway
12What's Happened with Gypsy Moth?
13What Have We Learned from Japanese Beetles?
14Ambrosia Beetles
15Ambrosia Beetles in Ohioa Partial List
- Non-Natives
- Ambrosiodmus rubricollis
- Dryoxylon onoharaensis
- Euwallacea validus
- Xyleborus californicus
- Xyleborus pelliculosus
- Xylosandrus crassiusculus (Granulated Ambrosia
Beetle) - Natives
- Monarthrum fasciatum (Yellow-Banded Timber
Beetle) - oak, maple, birch, sweetgum, blackgum, and
hickory - Xyloterinus politus (Beech Timber Beetle)
- Beech, oak, maple, birch, hickory, ash, and
magnolia
16The Big Gorillas
17Asian Longhorned Beetle (ALB) (Anoplophora
glabripennis)
Cerambycidae
18ALB Host Trees
- All Maples
- Sugar
- Silver
- Red
- Norway
- Boxelder
- Ash
- Birches
- Elms
- Willows
- Poplars
- Horsechestnuts
- Buckeyes
OH No!
19ALB Holes
20Tree Trunk Basics
Boring Basics
21Ring Porous
Ash Black Locust Elm Hickory Honeylocust Oak
22Diffuse Porous
Birch Beech Dogwood Maple Poplar Sycamore Spruces,
Pines, Firs, Hemlock
23ALB Boring Activity
Result Branch Breakage!
24ALB Boring Activity
25ALB in New York /New Jersey
26ALB in Chicago
1998
ERADICATED!!
27ALB in Massachusetts
2008
Estimated at least 5-6 yrs. old prior to discovery
64 sq. mile USDA APHIS ALB regulated area
By July, 2009 25,000 trees destroyed
28ALB Eradication Program
29ALB is a Traveler!
Here's my card. Look me up when you get to Ohio!
30ALB in Southwest Ohio
2009
31Another Segway
32Amicus plannipennis Ominous
33It's already among us
34Emerald Ash Borer
35EAB Only Attacks Ash Trees
36Loss of large ash trees in landscapes can be
devastating to homeowners
Synchronized Death
37States With Known EAB Infestations
38Known EAB Infestations
39How Did EAB Spread So Far So Fast?
40EAB Rate of Spread
¼ Mile / Yr.
Transition Zone
Non-infested Zone
Infested Zone
- Non-Native Insect Pests Spread like a Forest
Fire - Along a main front at the edge of the infested
zone - By leapfrogging with hot spots
41Spread From Oldest Infestation
¼ Mile / Yr.
10 20 Miles per Year!
Infested Zone
Transition Zone
Non-infested Zone
Infested Zone
- Non-Native Insect Pests Spread like a Forest
Fire - Along a main front at the edge of the infested
zone - By leapfrogging with hot spots
- Non-Native Insect Pests Spread like a Forest
Fire - When the main Fire reaches a critical mass
- The rate of spread increases
42EAB in Ohio
51 Counties with Known Infestations, 55 Counties
Quarantined
43EAB Detection Trap
44Emerald Ash Borer (EAB) AdultAgrilus planipennis
Metallic Wood-Boring Beetles
Order Coleoptera Family Buprestidae
Flat Back
D
ead
Round Belly
D-Shaped Exit Hole
45EAB Larval Feeding Behavior
Larvae Live Beneath the Bark of Living Ash Trees
Larvae consume phloem, cambium, and etch the xylem
46Ash is a Ring Porous Tree
47EAB on Ash
Tree decline and death can be rapid 3-5 years
EAB Damage
48EAB Diagnostics
BE CAREFUL! These symptoms could be caused by
something else
49What Should We Do??
50EAB Management Options
51EAB Management Options
- Do nothing, let nature take its course.
- Ash tree removal, replacement.
- Insecticide treatments.
52Insecticide Options for EAB
- Bark and canopy sprays
- Astro, Onyx
- Soil injections / drenches
- imidacloprid (e.g. Xytect 2x, Merit, Bayer
Advanced Tree Shrub Insect Control) - dinotefuron (Safari) Spring Only!
- Trunk injections
- imidacloprid (Xytect Infusable, Imicide, IMA-jet,
Pointer) - bidrin (Inject-A-Cide B)
- emamectin benzoate (TREE-äge)
- Systemic Trunk Sprays
- dinotefuron (Safari) Spring Only!
http//ashalert.osu.edu/
http//www.emeraldashborer.info/
53Overarching Non-Native Pest Management Objective
There is no Best Plan! One size does not fit
all!!
Develop YOUR OWN Plan!
54Guiding Principle
Those are my principles, and if you don't like
them... well, I have others. -- Groucho Marx
- Everyone is entitled to their own opinion, but
not their own facts. - -- Daniel Patrick Moynihan
55We Are Getting Close to the End
56Our Final Point
57To Reduce Confusion
58EAB Information
- www.emeraldashborer.info
- ashalert.osu.edu
- www.ohioagriculture.gov/eab
- www.entm.purdue.edu/EAB/index.shtml
Questions?
59A General EAB Plan
Seek Professional Help!
- Get the Numbers
- Perform an ash inventory
- Ash Numbers
- Ash sizes
- Ash relative to landscape impact
- Evaluate individual tree health is the tree
worth saving? - Get the Costs
- Removal
- Replacement
- Treatment
- Consider your location relative to the nearest
known EAB infestation - We recommend to homeowners and others that they
consult with an ISA Certified Arborist
60Professional Help