Sun loving, the beetles feed on ash foliage for a week or more before mating and laying eggs. Females produce fifty or more eggs, and lay them individually in bark cracks and crevices. They hatch ...
The emerald ash borer (EAB) is a deceptively beautiful insect. As the first part of the name implies, the one-centimeter long beetles are an iridescent, metallic green. They have large ...
After 15 years of relentless work to combat the spread of the Emerald Ash Borer beetles, the cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul have completed the removal of the last ash trees from public spaces ...
The Emerald Ash Borer was discovered in Boulder in 2013. This small beetle, which burrows under the bark of ash trees disrupting the flow of nutrients and water, is predicted to cause a 25 percent ...
Among the signs that your trees have been infested with emerald ash borer: pay attention to the ... of Natural Resources to combat an invasive beetle that's killing ash trees.
The Minnesota Department of Agriculture confirmed an infestation of emerald ash borer Thursday in Tower Hill Park. The emerald ash borer is an exotic beetle that feeds off nutrients in ash trees and ...
An emerald ash borer hovers, checking out the female forms ... areas not yet affected by EABs could help scientists detect the beetle’s spread in time to attempt preventive measures.
Emerald ash borer beetles, an invasive species that kills ash trees by gnawing away at the tissue beneath the bark, have toppled more than four trees onto her property over the past decade.