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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2005
April
Scientists issue warning about
dangers beetle poses to Illinios ash trees
Jim Barlow,
Life Sciences Editor
217-333-5802;jebarlow@uiuc.edu
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| Photo
by James E. Appleby, University of Illinois |
| The
emerald ash borer is about one-half inch long and
under bright light is dark green in color. MORE
photos. |
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4/29/05
CHAMPAIGN,
Ill. — Campers across Illinois are being asked to be firewood
wary. There could be an unwanted pest hidden inside that could be devastating
to the state’s 118 million ash trees if it emerges later this
summer from unburned wood.
The pest is the emerald ash borer (Agrilus planipennis), an exotic,
half-inch-long beetle. It has not yet been found in Illinois, but it
has destroyed as many as 10 million ash trees in Michigan since 2002.
It has spread to northeastern Indiana and northwestern Ohio.
Visitors to state parks will find 3-by-2 foot “Firewood Warning”
posters displayed in campgrounds and picnic areas, said James Appleby,
an entomologist at the University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and emeritus scientist at the
Illinois Natural History Survey. Homeowners who obtain their firewood
privately or haul it in by themselves also should be cautious, he said.
“This is an extremely serious pest,” Appleby said. “If
this beetle is allowed to get into the state, it will be devastating.
Travelers to Michigan could inadvertently transport the beetles back
here in firewood they obtained in Michigan or as passengers that flew
in through an open window.”
The borer spends the winter in larval form under the tree bark. Adult
beetles emerge from the wood from mid-May until late July. Firewood
from ash trees cut in Michigan could harbor borer larvae or adults that
are about to emerge.
Appleby, who is part of a team that has surveyed the damage in Michigan,
said that some property owners in the affected areas are not aware of
what killed their trees and may be giving away wood to visitors to their
homes.
It is the casual movement of firewood from Michigan that has officials
in neighboring states worried, Appleby said.
While most firewood dealers honor the quarantines in the affected areas,
some wood may be leaving illegally. The larvae, Appleby said, can still
be present in trees cut down several months earlier.
The emerald ash borer, a native of eastern Asia, appears to be dark
green in color when under bright light. Signs of infestation are D-shaped
holes about one-eighth inch across on large branches and trunks. Under
the bark, the larvae leave S-shaped tunnels, known as serpentine larval
galleries.
Infested trees, depending on their size, may not show physical damage
for two years. Thus avoiding wood from Michigan now is imperative, because
once the beetles establish themselves the state’s ash trees will
be in trouble, Appleby said.
Appleby and colleagues Phil Nixon, an entomologist in the department
of natural resources and environmental
sciences, and Charles Helm of the Natural History Survey have monitored
the damage in Michigan. They’ve also been working with state and
federal officials to try to prevent or deal with any infestation in
Illinois.
The emerald ash borer often is confused with the brilliant green tiger
beetle, a native insect often seen on the ground in open areas.
More information about the emerald ash borer is available through a
USDA Forest Service Web site
devoted to the borer and a site
run by officials in Indiana, Michigan and Ohio
.
Copyright photos of the beetle and related damage, taken by Appleby,
can be seen online.
Anyone who has Michigan firewood or suspects the presence of the emerald
ash borer should call 312-742-3385 (the Plant Protection and Quarantine
division of the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Animal and Plant
Health Inspection Service), the Illinois Department of Agriculture at
800-641-3934, a local forester of the Illinois Department of Natural
Resources, or a local U. of I. Extension office.
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