up to this point all beetle releases in the eastern U.S. have failed miserably
Exactly. Many different sites, several different beetle species, thousands of beetles (some released by me)....no control.
By the time a sufficient beetle population exists (if ever), our hemlocks will be dead. The best method thus far has been suggested by Dr. Grant (the guy in the article)...
1. Utilize multiple species of beetle with different feeding times to eat adelgid throughout much the year (called bracketing); 2. Build the beetle population in the understory trees and chemically treat larger trees to keep them alive until large beetle populations exist.
Dr. Grant has found that systemic chemical control have had no effect on the predator beetles, which is a good thing for his strategy.
So if our beetles never build a viable population, we may be treating these trees for their entire lives. Our funding efforts need to focus on beetles and other biocontrols, but also need to maintain and expand funding for chemical control.
The argument above mainly relates to large tracts of public lands. As of now, beetles are enormously expensive, and for homeowners, there is no guarantee that the beetles will actually stay on their trees to provide any benefit.
I'll continue to sell chemical control services at the same time hoping the beetles will do their thing soon.
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