Keystone Tree Experts
    
Horticultural Consultants
Home
About Us
Maintaining Your Landscape
Insect and Disease Index
Current Problems
Contact
Emerald Ash Borer

For your convenience this page can also be accessed by using this link: www.emeraldashborers.com.

DESCRIPTION
This beetle, originally from Asia, was discovered in July 2002 feeding on Ash trees in Southeastern Michigan. Larvae feed in the cambium layer of the tree (between the bark and the wood) and produce galleries that eventually girdle and kill the tree by disrupting the nutrient and water conducting tissues. Emerald Ash Borer has spread into Ohio, Illinois, Indiana, Maryland, West Virginia and Pennsylvania. Over 20 million Ash trees have been killed. In June 2007, EAB was found in western PA, near Pittsburgh and continued spread has occured in PA. Emerald Ash Borers were detected in June 2008 in a county adjacent to the original PA discovery.  Adult beetles are slender, elongate and small (.3 to .5 inches long). Adults are usually bronze or golden green with darker, metallic, emerald green wing covers. Larvae are white to cream-colored and flat. The head is brown and is usually retracted into the prothorax and only mouthparts are visible. The abdomen has 10 segments and has a pair of brown, pincer-like appendages on the last segment.

LIFE CYCLE
Eggs are laid between layers of bark and in bark crevices. The larvae hatch after approximately 1 week and bore into the tree where feeding begins on the inner bark and phloem. The larval feeding creates “S-like” galleries under the bark. The larvae go through 3 feeding stages before settling into a prepupal state for the winter. Pupation takes place in the late spring and adults begin to emerge through “D-shaped” exit holes in May and early June. The adults remain active until the end of the summer.
DAMAGE
The Emerald Ash Borer attacks all species of Ash. Ash trees are recognizable from the compound leaves which are arranged opposite of one another on the branch. Damage from the insect is difficult to detect in newly infested trees. Jagged holes created by woodpeckers feeding on the pre-pupal larvae may be an initial sign of a problem with EAB. After one year of infestation, the D-shaped exit holes left by the emerging adult beetles will be present on the branches and the trunk. When the bark is removed from infested trees, the excrement-filled larval tunnels are readily visible. These excavated tunnels disrupt the transport of nutrients and water within the tree during the summer and cause the foliage to wilt and the tree canopy will become increasingly sparse as branches die. Epicormic shoots may also develop on the trunk of the tree. Many trees lose 30-50% of their canopy after only 2 years of infestation and usually die within 3-4 years of infestation.

CONTROL
Preventative measures may be undertaken for specimen or particularly valuable Ash trees. Imidicloprid has been shown to help protect  Ashes from this devastating insect. Timing of the application is critical.

For professional assistance with tree and shrub problems contact a Keystone arborist.

Copyright © . All Rights Reserved.
Website Design & Hosting by IQnection Internet Services, Inc.
PLNA International Society of Arboriculture Certified Arborist
ISA Certified Arborists on staff