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Other Invasive Insects Or What Else do I Need to Worry About?

Other Invasive Insects

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Other Invasive Insects. Or What Else do I Need to Worry About?. Most insects are beneficial. pollinators. predators and parasites. food!. detritivores. Native vs. Invasive. Trees have some resistance Predators and parasites Populations often cycle Example: spruce budworm. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Other Invasive Insects

Other Invasive Insects

OrWhat Else do I Need to

Worry About?

Page 2: Other Invasive Insects

Most insects are beneficial

pollinators predators and parasites

detritivoresfood!

Page 3: Other Invasive Insects

Native vs. Invasive

• Trees have some resistance

• Predators and parasites• Populations often cycle• Example: spruce

budworm

• Trees often have no resistance

• Few or no effective natural enemies

• Populations keep on rising

Page 4: Other Invasive Insects

Reasons why you are glad you live Downeast

Page 5: Other Invasive Insects

Browntail Moth

Page 6: Other Invasive Insects

Winter Moth

Pupates in soil May-Nov

Page 7: Other Invasive Insects

• Hemlock• ~1/8” discrete white

woolly masses• Undersides of twigs• Base of needle

Hemlock Woolly Adelgid

Photos: USFSPhoto: Maine Forest Service

Page 8: Other Invasive Insects

Hemlock Woolly Adelgid

Forest: Alfred, Arundel, Berwick, Biddeford, Kennebunk, Old Orchard Beach and Topsham (detection survey); Scarborough (trained volunteer). Planted (EHS+HWA): Mount Desert, Sedgewick

Page 9: Other Invasive Insects

HWA Crawlers, Crawlers, Everywhere!

April - July• Abundant• Very Mobile• Nearly Invisible

Page 10: Other Invasive Insects

Hemlock Woolly Adelgid (HWA)

• Chemical treatment – when high risk of human spread

• Biocontrol – best long-term solution. In areas protected from development.

• Outreach and public education.

Page 11: Other Invasive Insects

Elongate Hemlock Scale

• First detected in ME in 2009

• Not quarantined – depend on public reporting

• Attacks fir and spruce as well

• Chemical control on planted trees to reduce spread to native forest

Maine Dept. Ag.

Page 12: Other Invasive Insects
Page 13: Other Invasive Insects

Two Invasives of Concern(not found here yet)

Page 14: Other Invasive Insects

Brown Spruce Longhorned Beetle

Phot

o: G

eorg

ette

Smith

, bug

woo

d.or

g

Longhorned beetle (Cerambycid)

Page 15: Other Invasive Insects

New Find 2011

Page 16: Other Invasive Insects

Maine Hosts: Spruce (fir, larch, pines)

Photos: Maine Forest Service, Forest Policy and Management

Page 17: Other Invasive Insects

Recognizing BSLB

Photos: CFIA (left), Jon Sweeney, bugwood.org (middle and right)

Round to D-shaped 1/8” exit holes

Resin Covered TrunksYellowing Foliage

Page 18: Other Invasive Insects

Recognizing BSLB

Photos: Georgette Smith, bugwood.org

L-Shaped Pupal ChamberLarval Feeding Tunnels

Page 19: Other Invasive Insects

Recognizing (what is not) BSLB

• Spruce Beetle– Native pest– Pitch tubes (not always)– Round exit holes

(smaller)

Page 20: Other Invasive Insects

Questions?

Photo: Jon Sweeney, Natural Resources Canada, Bugwood.org

Page 21: Other Invasive Insects

Emerald Ash Borer (EAB)

Pest and Diseases Image Library, Bugwood.org

Bright metallic green -½ inch long

Page 22: Other Invasive Insects

Emerald Ash Borer

- long and narrow- likely to be found near ash trees

Tiger Beetle

- broader- definite ‘shoulders’- often flies near ground(very fast)

Page 23: Other Invasive Insects

Will our cold winters protect us from EAB?

Page 24: Other Invasive Insects
Page 25: Other Invasive Insects

Maine Hosts: White, Green, Brown Ash

White Green Brown

White Green

BrownPhotos: Maine Forest Service, Forest Policy and Management

Page 26: Other Invasive Insects

Crown Decline (top down)Troy Kimoto, Canadian Food Inspection Agency, Bugwood.org

Page 27: Other Invasive Insects

Epicormic Shoots

Page 28: Other Invasive Insects

S-shaped Galleries

Page 29: Other Invasive Insects

D-shaped exit holesPhoto: University of Wisconsin Entomology

Page 30: Other Invasive Insects

Bark SplittingMichigan Department of Agriculture, Bugwood.org

Page 31: Other Invasive Insects

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Recognizing EAB

David Cappaert, Michigan State University, Bugwood.org

Jim Tresouthick, Village of Homewood, Bugwood.org

Page 32: Other Invasive Insects

Impact• Hosts

– Attacks allall species of North American ash

– Kills allall of the trees it attacks

– Has killed 10’s of millions of trees since 2002

– Has the potential to wipe out ashin NA

Photo: Maine Department of Agriculture

Page 33: Other Invasive Insects

The Enemy

• Killed tens of millions of trees since 2002

• Spread to 18 states and 2 provinces

• No effective natural enemies (yet)

• Little or no tree resistance

Emerald Ash Borer

One of the biggest problems…

No good method of monitoring for EAB

Page 34: Other Invasive Insects

Purple Traps Trap Trees

Biosurveillance

So How Do We Monitor For EAB?

Public Education

Page 35: Other Invasive Insects

Purple Sticky Traps

-Least sensitive-Most user friendly-Cheapest

2012 – 965 traps2013 – 852 traps

Page 36: Other Invasive Insects

Trap trees

-fairly sensitive

-lots of work!

Page 37: Other Invasive Insects

Volunteertrap-tree network

2013 – hope to involve state parks and MFS foresters

Page 38: Other Invasive Insects
Page 39: Other Invasive Insects

Biosurveillance

Page 40: Other Invasive Insects

Cerceris fumipennis

-Native wasp

-Solitary ground-nester (in colonies)

-Non-stinging

-Provisions its nest with adult buprestids (metallic wood-boring beetles)

-Is capable of finding EAB at low levels

BIOSURVEILLANCE

Family: Crabronidae(hunting wasps)

Page 41: Other Invasive Insects

Wasp colonies used for biosurveillance

Colonies not used

Page 42: Other Invasive Insects

If we find an EAB infestation early…

• Smaller area infested, fewer beetles present• Much lower chance of inadvertent spread• Smaller quarantine• We have more management options• Management is much more effective

Page 43: Other Invasive Insects

We found EAB!Now what???

• Delimiting survey (monitoring)• SLAM: SLow Ash Mortality (management of

EAB)• Biological control• Pesticide options

Page 44: Other Invasive Insects

3 Parasitic Wasps

Spathius

Tetrastichus

Oobius

Page 45: Other Invasive Insects

SLow Ash Mortality

• Delimiting survey• Remove large trees in infested area• Girdle trees to concentrate & remove EAB

• Can concentrate and reduce EAB popluation

Page 46: Other Invasive Insects
Page 47: Other Invasive Insects

Firewood