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 Exotic Forest Insects 
  Article #213, August 2014 
Exotic pests are one of the more serious threats to forest health. While few exotics pose serious challenges, there are some insects, diseases, and plants that do. Eradication is possible if small infestations can be detected early.
     In this article  series, the more serious exotic forest pests will be reviewed.  Over 40,000 exotic species have been  introduced into North America and most have proven to be useful to humans and  benign to the natural environment.  Most  exotic introductions fail to establish, but some have grown invasive and  damaging. 
       Among the exotic  forest insect pests, two borers and two adelgids are of particular note.  However, there are about three dozen  important species.  
       The Asian  long-horned beetle (ALHB) (Anoplophora glabripennis) has not yet been  identified in Michigan.  The nearest  infestation is near Cincinnati, Ohio.  An  infestation near Chicago was eradicated.   However, there is a large infestation around Worcester,  Massachusetts.  Current information can  be had on a USDA website.  
       The ALHB is a  large and robust beetle, an inch or more in length, black with white spots, and  antennae of alternate white (bluish) and black segments.  It’s larger than our native wood borers, but  a couple of our natives might be mistaken for ALHB.  
       These borers  prefer maple species (sugar, red, silver, and boxelder) but have a long list of  menu choices.  Exit holes of the emerging  adults are about a half-inch in diameter.   The larvae chew their way through the wood of the tree.  Weakened branches can fall, damaging property  and potentially injuring people.  
       The emerald ash borer (EAB) (Agrilus planipennis) is now familiar to most Michigan residents and the  EAB range includes much of the greater Midwest and Northeastern states.  The Michigan Department of Agriculture and  Rural Development maintains a quarantine program.    
       The EAB kills  only ash trees (Fraxinus spp.).  The half-inch  long adult is bright green and might be confused with predatory tiger beetles  and common Polydrusus weevils.  The larvae form serpentine tunnels under the  bark, but do not bore into the wood.  The  adults emerge from D-shaped exit holes.  
       The EAB first  affects the tops of trees, and then works downward.  Decline can be evident over several growing  seasons.  Woodpecker activity may  indicate numerous larvae.  The trees will  often send up sprouts from the tree base.  
       The national ash  resource is threatened by this exotic beetle.   In Michigan, about five percent of the statewide forest volume is  ash.  More importantly to many, a large  share of residential and park trees are ash.   Loss of these trees results in significant visual impact.  The EAB has been, so far, the most expensive  forest pest with damages of nearly two billion dollars.  
       The hemlock  woolly adelgid (HWA) (Adelges tsugae) and balsam  woolly adelgid (BWA) (Adelges piceae) appear very similar but damage only  their respective tree species.  Adelgids  are tiny insects that insert a long stylus (feeding tube) into the twig and  feed on the tree juices.  They cover  themselves with a protective white “woolly” coating, sort of like tiny moth  balls.  The adelgids concentrate near the  bases of the needles.  
       Neither of these  adelgids has become established in Michigan, although three infestations of the  HWA have been eradicated (hopefully).   Introductions have been traced to nursery stock from eastern states  where the insect has become well established.  
       About 30, from  over 400, exotic insect species have caused significant forest health problems  in North America.  More information about Michigan forest pests can be found on the Upper Peninsula Tree Identification website and the  Michigan DNR  Forest Health website.
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  Bill Cook is an MSU 
  Extension forester providing educational programming for the Upper Peninsula. 
  His office is located at the MSU Forest Biomass Innovation Center near 
  Escanaba. The Center is the headquarters for three MSU Forestry properties in 
  the U.P., with a combined area of about 8,000 acres. He can be reached at cookwi@msu.edu 
  or 906-786-1575.
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  by Bill Cook, Forester/Biologist, Michigan State University Extension, 6005 
  J Road, Escanaba, MI  49829
  906-786-1575 (voice),  906-786-9370 (fax),  e-mail:  cookwi@msu.edu
  
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