ODA
asks citizens to check their trees for
invasive pests
REYNOLDSBURG,
Ohio (August 12, 2013) - In an
effort to protect the trees of Ohio, the Ohio Department of Agriculture
(ODA)
is encouraging Ohio citizens to check their trees for signs of the
Walnut Twig
Beetle and Asian Longhorned Beetle. Both of these tree pests have been
detected
in southwest Ohio and threaten the health and viability of the state’s
hardwood
forests, as well as some of the state’s leading industries. Signs and
symptoms
of both the Walnut Twig Beetle and Asian Longhorned Beetle are visible
in
August.
The
Walnut Twig Beetle is a small beetle known
to carry a fungus that causes Thousand Cankers Disease (TCD), which can
kill
walnut trees. TCD is caused when the Walnut Twig Beetles bore into the
branches
and trunk tissue of walnut trees, thereby introducing the fungus.
Repeated
attacks by the insect lead to multiple individual infections by the
fungus and
the tree eventually dies. There is no known treatment for TCD. The
disease was
first found in Colorado in 2003 and has since been detected in 13 other
states.
Walnut
Twig Beetle was first confirmed in Ohio
in late 2012 in traps set by Ohio Department of Natural Resources
Division of
Forestry officials in Butler County. Additionally, scientists from the
Ohio
Plant Diagnostic Network, a cooperative partnership between ODA and The
Ohio
State University, recently isolated the TCD fungus from walnut branch
samples
from the Butler County area, marking the first time TCD has been
confirmed in
Ohio.
ODA
is in the process of expanding its TCD
quarantine to include Butler County. ODA officials have also been
working to
set Walnut Twig Beetle traps in portions of Butler, Hamilton and Warren
counties to monitor for any additional infestations of the beetle.
Landowners
and homeowners are strongly
encouraged to watch for signs of TCD on their walnut trees. Symptoms of
TCD
vary, but commonly include thinning crowns, yellowing or wilted leaves
in the
crown and limbs that died recently.
Asian
Longhorned Beetles are large, shiny black
insects measuring 1 to 1 1⁄2 inches long, not including antennae, with
random
white spots. Their white-banded antennae can be as long as the body
itself on
females and almost twice the body length on males. The invasive Asian
Longhorned Beetle grows, reproduces in and kills up to 13 genera of
trees such
as maple, birch, horse chestnut, poplar, willow, elm, ash and buckeye.
Asian
Longhorned Beetle was first confirmed in
Ohio in 2011. The beetles were found to be infesting trees in Tate
Township in
Clermont County. In addition to the Ohio infestation, the beetle is
currently
found in parts of Massachusetts and New York, with eradication efforts
succeeding in Illinois and New Jersey. ODA continues to work with the
United
States Department of Agriculture Animal and Health Inspection Service
(USDA
APHIS) and other partners to eradicate the Asian Longhorned Beetle from
Ohio.
In an effort to detect and prevent future infestations of Asian
Longhorned
Beetle USDA APHIS has declared the month of August as Tree Check Month,
encouraging citizens to get out and check their trees for signs of the
beetle.
Signs
of Asian Longhorned Beetle infestation
include perfectly round exit holes (about 3/8 to 1/2 inch in diameter)
made by
adult beetles when they emerge from trees; the pockmarks on tree trunks
and
branches where female beetles deposit eggs; frass (wood shavings and
saw dust)
produced by larval feeding and tunneling; early fall coloration of
leaves or
dead branches; and running sap produced by the tree at the egg laying
sites, or
in response to larval tunneling. Infested trees may also snap or break
during
high winds due to the wood being weakened by tunneling.
ODA
encourages citizens to check their trees
and be on the lookout for signs of these pests. To report signs and
symptoms on
your trees, please contact ODA at 855-252-6450 or by email at
plantpest@agri.ohio.gov . For more information go to
www.agri.ohio.gov.
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