News, sports, information and inspiration from North Baltimore - SouthWood Area, Henry Township, Wood County, Ohio, U.S.A. • updated EVERY DAY!

AD: Reineke Family Dealerships
Thursday, May 23, 2013

Severe Springtime Weather

How do YOU react?

I'm a storm chaser
I take safety measures
Other

View Poll Report


   
Ohio Invasive Species Profile: Asian Longhorned Beetle
Posting Date: 03/08/2013

COLUMBUS, Ohio - As part of National Invasive Species Awareness Week March 3-8, here are some facts and figures on the Asian longhorned beetle, one of Ohio's newest invasive species:

  • What it is: Big, shiny-black beetle with white spots. Has very long antennae, hence its name, which are black with white stripes. Its body is about the size of an almond. Total length, with antennae extended, can be nearly as long as a finger.
  • Where it's from: Japan, Korea, southern China.
  • What it does: Adult females lay their eggs in the bark of many kinds of hardwood trees, including maple, horsechestnut, buckeye, poplar, willow, elm, birch, London plane tree, sycamore and others. (Both healthy and stressed trees may fall victim.) The larvae hatch, then burrow into the trunk. Their tunnels cut the essential cambium layer in the trunk, which normally transports water and nutrients to and from the roots and leaves. The tree eventually dies.
  • Impact: At risk are Ohio's valuable hardwood forests, whose standing maple timber alone is worth $2.5 billion. Also threatened: The state's $5 billion nursery industry, which provides jobs for about 240,000 people.
  • Where it's at in Ohio: Parts of Clermont County in southwest Ohio. There's currently about a 60-square-mile quarantine zone around the infested area.
  • Elsewhere in the U.S.: In four other states besides Ohio. Has been successfully eradicated in Illinois and parts of New Jersey. Is being controlled in New York and Massachusetts.
  • How it got here: Apparently in solid wood packing or crating materials on a U.S.-bound cargo ship from China. First found in New York City in 1996.
  • 3 odd facts: It spends about nine months of the year inside the tree so is nearly impossible to kill with insecticides. Can fly up to 400 yards but typically doesn't leave its host tree; studies in China show infestations usually spread less than 1,000 feet a year. Produces new adults every year; most other longhorned beetle species produce new adults only every two to four years.
  • Quote: "The big thing is that unlike the emerald ash borer, for instance, which attacks just a single type of tree (ash trees), the Asian longhorned beetle can use 13 different kinds of trees as its host. So it's not such a narrow pest. It has a much broader impact. It can be eradicated, however. We have that opportunity if we can get ahead of it before it gets settled." -- Kathy Smith, director of Ohio State University Extension's Ohio Woodland Stewards Program

  • Sources: Ohio Department of Agriculture Web page; Ohio Department of Natural Resources Division of Forestry Web page.

A statewide coalition of natural resource-related groups, including OSU Extension and Ohio Sea Grant at Ohio State University, is sponsoring the observance of National Invasive Species Awareness Week in Ohio

 

 
Name  
Email  
Opinion (2000 Characters)  
Publish My Opinion    
 
CAPTCHA Image
Reload Image
 
 
These are the recently posted stories (This is a TEST!)
  PHOTOS: KISS Day held at Powell

Special Sections 
Historical 
Daily Games 
Websites 
 Keywords:
one or more words required
all words required
forced & ordered phrase
Multi forced & ordered phrase
words with exceptions
Help
 
 Issue date:
Date Format: dd-mm-yyyy

This is the bottom of the page

 

""""""""""""Long time member of The North Baltimore Area Chamber of Commerce


""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
""""""""""""""""
TheNBXpress - Proud Member since 2010



 
AD: TheNBXpress.com