Dan F
ArboristSite Operative
I'm starting this thread for info on Emerald Ash Borer (EAB). This is info that has been passed along to me. If you have info, feel free to post it. Questions or comments, please post them on the thread marked "reply here". This will be both Canadian and US EAB info.
Here's the first article:
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Bug spurring drastic plan
Thousands of ash trees may be cut down to stop the advance of the emerald ash borer.
DEBORA VAN BRENK, Free Press Reporter
2003-11-19 04:30:23
Federal officials are proposing to cut down thousands of ash trees in a huge swath of land between Tilbury and Chatham to halt the spread of the emerald ash borer. The killer beetle decimating forests in the United States has reached Chatham-Kent on its fast and devastating move eastward.
Researchers confirm the borer has been found in two patches of trees near Tilbury and Merlin -- the first time it has advanced east of Essex County.
Yesterday, city and federal officials met privately in Chatham-Kent to discuss details of a proposed "ash-free zone" that could stop the bugs' inexorable march through Southwestern Ontario.
Tom Beaton, Chatham-Kent's parks superintendent, said the swath would be 10 kilometres wide by at least 40 kilometres long and be located somewhere east of Tilbury and west of Chatham.
The precise location would depend on how quickly the bug advances before federal money is approved for the task.
That could happen by the middle of next month, Beaton hopes.
"Everybody's holding their breath at this point in time. We think there's an announcement coming."
Federal approval is "looking encouraging," said Ken Mar-chant, forestry specialist with the Canadian Food Inspection Agency.
The emerald ash borer is an invasive beetle that attacks and destroys white, red and green ash (but not mountain ash). It's already destroyed as many as five million trees in Michigan and as many as one million in Essex County.
"The only way to stop this, because nothing's been found over the summer that's a silver bullet, is to cut a swath that's free of ash," Marchant said.
The federal government has the authority to go onto private property and get rid of ash trees to destroy the pest. The move wouldn't need approval from property owners or municipal councils.
Creating that zone will cost millions, warned Robert Holland of the Ash Rescue Coalition, but it's already been costly to have waited this long. "This thing is exploding. Every year it grows exponentially."
He said the federal government has been dealing with the problem in "a minimalist, passive way" that could ultimately cost municipalities a fortune.
"It's a complex problem, but it's a multi-billion-dollar risk," Holland said.
In Windsor, city taxpayers will spend $6 million to remove and replace 6,000 city-owned ash trees.
London, by contrast, has 9,600 ash trees.
Beaton said his municipality has no estimate of its number of ash trees, but residents should be concerned.
"It's potentially an environmental disaster," Beaton said.
New information on the borer suggests the insect can move as far as 10 kilometres (previously, it was believed a kilometre was its maximum range), may be more active during colder weather than first thought and may have the ability to pick on host trees that aren't ash.
Meanwhile, for the first time, Chatham-Kent residents are being urged not to move firewood, untreated lumber or nursery stock out of infested or potentially infested areas.
Marchant said that movement poses a greater danger to spread the insect than anything else.
Highway 401 signs telling motorists not to transport firewood out of Essex are being amended and moved to Chatham-Kent's borders, Beaton said.
A ban was placed yesterday on exporting any live trees or firewood out of all of Essex County.
Beaton said ash-tree production for furniture, wood floors and other products is a $6.5-billion annual industry in Canada.
Copyright © The London Free Press 2001,2002,2003
Here's the first article:
---------------
Bug spurring drastic plan
Thousands of ash trees may be cut down to stop the advance of the emerald ash borer.
DEBORA VAN BRENK, Free Press Reporter
2003-11-19 04:30:23
Federal officials are proposing to cut down thousands of ash trees in a huge swath of land between Tilbury and Chatham to halt the spread of the emerald ash borer. The killer beetle decimating forests in the United States has reached Chatham-Kent on its fast and devastating move eastward.
Researchers confirm the borer has been found in two patches of trees near Tilbury and Merlin -- the first time it has advanced east of Essex County.
Yesterday, city and federal officials met privately in Chatham-Kent to discuss details of a proposed "ash-free zone" that could stop the bugs' inexorable march through Southwestern Ontario.
Tom Beaton, Chatham-Kent's parks superintendent, said the swath would be 10 kilometres wide by at least 40 kilometres long and be located somewhere east of Tilbury and west of Chatham.
The precise location would depend on how quickly the bug advances before federal money is approved for the task.
That could happen by the middle of next month, Beaton hopes.
"Everybody's holding their breath at this point in time. We think there's an announcement coming."
Federal approval is "looking encouraging," said Ken Mar-chant, forestry specialist with the Canadian Food Inspection Agency.
The emerald ash borer is an invasive beetle that attacks and destroys white, red and green ash (but not mountain ash). It's already destroyed as many as five million trees in Michigan and as many as one million in Essex County.
"The only way to stop this, because nothing's been found over the summer that's a silver bullet, is to cut a swath that's free of ash," Marchant said.
The federal government has the authority to go onto private property and get rid of ash trees to destroy the pest. The move wouldn't need approval from property owners or municipal councils.
Creating that zone will cost millions, warned Robert Holland of the Ash Rescue Coalition, but it's already been costly to have waited this long. "This thing is exploding. Every year it grows exponentially."
He said the federal government has been dealing with the problem in "a minimalist, passive way" that could ultimately cost municipalities a fortune.
"It's a complex problem, but it's a multi-billion-dollar risk," Holland said.
In Windsor, city taxpayers will spend $6 million to remove and replace 6,000 city-owned ash trees.
London, by contrast, has 9,600 ash trees.
Beaton said his municipality has no estimate of its number of ash trees, but residents should be concerned.
"It's potentially an environmental disaster," Beaton said.
New information on the borer suggests the insect can move as far as 10 kilometres (previously, it was believed a kilometre was its maximum range), may be more active during colder weather than first thought and may have the ability to pick on host trees that aren't ash.
Meanwhile, for the first time, Chatham-Kent residents are being urged not to move firewood, untreated lumber or nursery stock out of infested or potentially infested areas.
Marchant said that movement poses a greater danger to spread the insect than anything else.
Highway 401 signs telling motorists not to transport firewood out of Essex are being amended and moved to Chatham-Kent's borders, Beaton said.
A ban was placed yesterday on exporting any live trees or firewood out of all of Essex County.
Beaton said ash-tree production for furniture, wood floors and other products is a $6.5-billion annual industry in Canada.
Copyright © The London Free Press 2001,2002,2003