EMERALD ASH BORER CONFIRMED IN DES MOINES COUNTY, IOWA

New Infestation Discovered in Burlington

 

Media Advisory

The Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship, Iowa Department of
Natural Resources, and Iowa State University Extension and Outreach will
host a press conference call at 10:30 a.m., Tuesday, July 16, 2013.

 

Dial In: 866-685-1580

Conference Code: 0009991695#

 

Present:

*	Robin Pruisner, IDALS State Entomologist
*	Paul Tauke, DNR State Forester
*	Emma Hanigan, DNR Urban Forest Coordinator
*	Tivon Feeley, DNR Forest Health Coordinator
*	Donald Lewis, ISU Extension Entomologist
*	Laura Jesse, ISU Extension Entomologist
*	Jeff Iles, ISU Extension Horticulturist
*	Jesse Randall, ISU Extension Forester
*	Rob Meinders, USDA State Plant Health Director
*	Casey Chadwick, Burlington City Forester

 

ISU Extension and Outreach specialists have prepared an Emerald Ash Borer
FAQ. 

 

News Release

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

 

Contacts: 

Dustin Vande Hoef, Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship,
515-281-3375 

Kevin Baskins, Iowa Department of Natural Resources, 515-281-8395

Laura Sternweis, Iowa State University Extension and Outreach 515-294-0775

 

 

EMERALD ASH BORER CONFIRMED IN DES MOINES COUNTY, IOWA

New Infestation Discovered in Burlington

 

DES MOINES – Emerald Ash Borer (EAB) has been positively identified in a
residential tree in the city of Burlington in Des Moines County, making this
the second location where the invasive beetle has been found in Iowa. It
initially had been found on Henderson Island in the Mississippi River in
Allamakee County in 2010.

 

EAB kills all ash species by larval burrowing under the bark and eating the
actively growing layers of the trees. EAB is now considered to be one of the
most destructive forest pests ever seen in North America.

 

State Entomologist Robin Pruisner said the Iowa Department of Agriculture
and Land Stewardship, along with USDA, will be issuing a quarantine for Des
Moines County in the near future. A quarantine by state and U.S. agriculture
departments means that hardwood firewood, ash logs and wood chips cannot be
moved out of the area without a permit.

 

Pruisner said all Iowans are strongly cautioned not to transport firewood
across county or state lines, since the movement of firewood throughout Iowa
or to other states poses the greatest threat to quickly spread EAB even
further. Most EAB infestations in the United States have been started by
people unknowingly moving infested firewood, nursery plants, or sawmill
logs. The adult beetle also can fly short distances, approximately 2 to 5
miles.

 

EAB is native to eastern Asia, and was detected in the United States near
Detroit, Mich., in 2002. Since 2003, the Iowa EAB Team has been conducting
annual surveys to determine whether and where this pest is in Iowa. The team
includes officials from the Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land
Stewardship, Iowa State University Extension and Outreach, the Iowa
Department of Natural Resources, USDA Animal Plant Health Inspection Service
(APHIS) and the USDA Forest Service.

 

“Treatments against EAB are too late this year. If you are within 15 miles
of Burlington, Iowa, and have a healthy ash tree, preventive treatments can
be made mid-April to mid-May 2014,” said ISU Extension and Outreach
Entomologist Mark Shour. For more details, see ISU Extension and Outreach
publication PM 2084, www.extension.iastate.edu/Publications/PM2084.pdf.

 

Ash is one of the most abundant native tree species in North America, and
has been heavily planted as a landscape tree in yards and other urban areas.
According to the USDA Forest Service, Iowa has an estimated 52 million rural
ash trees and approximately 3.1 million more ash trees in urban areas.
Burlington has about 700 ash trees in the public right-of-way and an
estimated 2,000 residential trees. 

 

To learn more about EAB and other pests that are threatening Iowa’s tree
population, please visit www.IowaTreePests.com
<http://www.iowatreepests.com/> . Or, for more information contact any of
the following members of the Iowa EAB Team:

§  Robin Pruisner, State Entomologist, 515-725-1470,
[log in to unmask]

§  Tivon Feeley, DNR Forest Health Coordinator, 515-281-4915,
[log in to unmask]

§  Emma Hanigan, DNR Urban Forest Coordinator, 515-281-5600,
[log in to unmask] 

§  Jesse Randall, ISU Extension Forester, 515-294-1168, [log in to unmask]

§  Mark Shour, ISU Extension Entomologist, 515-294-5963, [log in to unmask]

§  Laura Jesse, ISU Extension Entomologist, ISU Plant and Insect Diagnostic
Clinic, 515-294-0581, [log in to unmask] 

§  Donald Lewis, ISU Extension Entomologist, 515-294-1101,
[log in to unmask] 

§  Jeff Iles, ISU Extension Horticulturist, 515-294-3718, [log in to unmask] 

 


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