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Asian Longhorned Beetle

Asian Longhorned Beetle. Bob Heyd Forest Health Management. MDNR Forest Management Division Forest Health, Inventory & Monitoring. Exotic Forest Pest and Pest Management Exotic Forest Pests: New and on the horizon Management Strategies for native and exotic pests Forest Health Monitoring

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Asian Longhorned Beetle

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  1. Asian Longhorned Beetle Bob Heyd Forest Health Management

  2. MDNR Forest Management DivisionForest Health, Inventory & Monitoring • Exotic Forest Pest and Pest Management • Exotic Forest Pests: New and on the horizon • Management Strategies for native and exotic pests • Forest Health Monitoring • Aerial Survey • Ground Detection and Evaluation surveys • Short and Long-Term Monitoring • Inventory

  3. >31 Exotic Borers discovered in the contiguous US from 1985 to early 2008 First found in 17 states 3 Buprestids 1 Exotic 2 Exotics 3 Exotics 4 Exotics 6 Exotics 5 Cerambycids 1 Siricid 22 Scolytids 14 ambrosia, 8 bark beetles

  4. Photo credit: A. J. Sawyer, USDA-APHIS-PPQ

  5. imported wooden crate with tunneling damage

  6. plugged hole in crating

  7. Asian Longhorned Beetle

  8. Origin:Native pest of Asia (China and Korea) Distribution:Populations of ALB have been detected in Japan, Canada, Austria, France, Italy, United Kingdom, Poland, the Netherlands, and Germany Host Range:In the U.S., the known ALB hosts include all species of 12 tree genera: Maple, boxelder, willow, elm, birch, horsechestnut, poplar, ash, London plane tree, mimosa, European mountain ash, hackberry, katsura tree…

  9. Potential Economic Impacts Affected industries: Maple syrup Tree nurseries Lumber and veneer Home construction Furniture and cabinets Pulp and paper Firewood Tourism

  10. Potential Environmental Impacts • ALB host trees are an important component to forest ecosystems as well as urban environments: • Habitat for animals • Prevent soil erosion • Climate regulation (shade, block wind) • Diminish storm water runoff • Reduce air, water, and noise pollution

  11. Michigan Impacts • Hard Maple and Aspen constitute 27% (7.2 billion cubic feet), or 43% (155 million cubic feet) of the commercial harvests statewide. • Michigan's forest-based economy is estimated to be 200,000 jobs and over $12 billion of value-added. • Includes forest-based tourism and recreation (50,000 jobs and $3 billion); and forest products industries/manufacturing (150,000 jobs and $9 billion).

  12. Risks to the USA Timber Industry • In 1986, timber was the most important agricultural crop in the U.S. in terms of dollar value of production, surpassing corn, soybean and hay. • The delivered value of the 1986 U.S. timber output was $17.1 billion (in 1996 dollars). • Total shipments of wood manufactured products were valued at $252 billion. • If left unchecked, the USDA estimates the Asian longhorned beetle could cause as much as $138 billion in damage to the U.S. economy. • 30% of USA Urban Forest are susceptible to ALB

  13. Learn to ID ALB and Report It! 1 to 1 ½ inches in length Long antennae, banded with black and white Shiny, jet black body with distinctive white spots May have blue tarsi

  14. Asian long-horned beetle infested tree

  15. oviposition holes

  16. new oviposition hole

  17. oviposition holes

  18. frass being pushed out of tunnels

  19. ALB Signs Adult feeding On leaf midrib and petioles Emergence holes

  20. feeding damage under bark

  21. exit holes

  22. exit hole

  23. adult feeding damage on twig

  24. sap flowing from holes

  25. Photo credit: M. Bohne, USDA-FS-FHP

  26. Photo credit: M. Bohne, USDA-FS-FHP

  27. Photo credit: A. J. Sawyer, USDA-APHIS-PPQ

  28. 5-7mm

  29. Egg site 1 2 inches Healed exit hole

  30. Bovenzi Land Trust Host tree removal impacted 91 acres

  31. What’s ALB Doing in Natural Forests?

  32. Delaval

  33. ALB Exit Holes Delaval

  34. Attack class distribution

  35. Oviposition Sites by Height Delaval Boylston

  36. What Have We Learned? • ALB is not outright killing forest trees • Little impact on tree growth • 10-15 years before decline! • ALB found in forest trees of all sizes • ALB attacked and survived at higher rates in red maple • ALB moves throughout forest stands

  37. Old Damage is Different

  38. Could go Undetected for a Long Time

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