In this episode of ID That Tree, meet the ash family, with specific focus on the white ash, which is typically found on higher and drier sites than its cohorts. This species, which is in trouble due ...
This mean, green, tree-destroying machine might be coming to your area — if it isn't already there. The emerald ash borer, native to Asia, was first spotted in the U.S. near Detroit in 2002. It's ...
On May 25, Texas A&M Forest Service collected an adult beetle and tentatively identified it as an emerald ash borer (EAB) in southern Wise County. The specimen was later confirmed by the USDA ...
In this episode of ID That Tree, Purdue Extension forester Lenny Farlee introduces the blue ash. This native Indiana ash species can be differentiated from other members of the ash family by corky ...
One of the three wasp species the state's Division of Forests and Lands uses are tied to a tree during their release so they can emerge in their own time. Earlier this summer, during a scheduled tree ...
The invasive emerald ash borer, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, was first found in the United States in southeast Michigan in 2002. In the decades since, the wood-boring beetle has ...
They’re flashy, they’re hungry, they’re relentless, and they’re here. The long-expected, long-dreaded arrival of emerald ash borers in Mankato was officially verified in December. When they finish ...