For Immediate Release
May 29, 2018
Contact: John Bott,
(207) 287-3156, john.c.bott@maine.gov
Emerald Ash Borer Discovered in Maine
State officials have been prepared for the destructive
insect’s arrival
AUGUSTA
– Officials at the Maine Department of Agriculture, Conservation and Forestry
(DACF) report that emerald ash borer (EAB) has been found in Maine. Despite an
aggressive search for at least a decade, the destructive forest insect from
Asia had not been detected in Maine previously. It has killed hundreds of
millions of ash trees in thirty-four states throughout the country. The
estimated commercial (unprocessed) value of Maine ash trees is approximately
$320 million.
United
States Department of Agriculture (USDA) officials with the Animal and Plant
Health and Inspection Service (APHIS) have confirmed the identification of a
pre-pupa found in Madawaska, Maine. The discovery was made by a joint DACF –
U.S. Forest Service (USFS) team on May 22, 2018. The team had responded
following the discovery of EAB in Edmundston, New Brunswick, just across the
river from Madawaska.
Discovery
Anticipated
The
Maine DACF has long anticipated the arrival of EAB and the inevitable
destruction that follows. Public outreach has been conducted for fifteen (15)
years. Experts have long believed that the insect has been present Maine but
undetected despite an aggressive effort to find it. Its discovery in Quebec,
Vermont and New Hampshire further added to the growing concern.
Steps
Taken To Locate EAB (EAB Surveillance in Maine)
- Firewood
awareness (2003–present)
- Exotic
Woodboring/Bark Beetle Survey (2004–2007, 2015)
- Girdled
Trap Tree Surveys (2007–present)
- Purple
Trap Surveys (2008–present)—4,668 traps
- Hundreds
of participating volunteers, looking for visual signs of EAB, including
woodpecker feeding
- Cerceris
Biosurveillance (2008–present)
- Forest
Pest Outreach Trainings (2009–present)—Outreach, events, presentations
- Nursery
Visual Surveys (2015–present)—More than 30 nurseries
- Green
Funnel Trap (2016–present)
- Conservation
District outreach and trainings (2016–present)
Current
Maine Response Status
State
and federal officials are meeting to implement a statewide emergency-response
plan. To determine the extent of the infestation, a multi-agency survey effort
has been launched including personnel from the Maine DACF, APHIS and USFS.
As
recently as April 26, officials conducted a multi-agency tabletop meeting to
create an emergency plan for responding to EAB’s eventual discovery and
implement a planned response. That is now underway.
Additional
information will be released as more is learned from teams in the field and as
data is processed.
Emerald
Ash Borer (EAB)
Emerald
ash borer was first discovered in the Detroit, Michigan area in 2002, though it
is believed to have arrived in the 1990s. The beetle is about one half an inch
and metallic green. Its larva tunnels through the wood just under the bark of
ash trees and can kill even healthy trees in three-to-five years. Hundreds of
millions of trees across the country have been killed.
Ash
trees comprise 4 percent of Maine’s hardwood forest and are also an important
street tree. Emerald ash borer threatens all species of ash trees (except
mountain ash) and could have significant ecological and economic impacts. There
are no practical means to control EAB in forested areas, though pesticide
treatments can protect individual trees.
Slowing
the spread of EAB is crucial. An emerald ash borer generally moves only about
one half-mile on its own in a year, but can move hundreds of miles in a single
day within a piece of infested firewood.
Caution
Regarding Firewood
Emerald
ash borer is not the only threat to our forests that can move in the seemingly
benign firewood brought to camp. Numerous other insects and diseases can also
hitchhike in firewood. Spread the word: use local firewood. If you have friends
or family planning to visit Maine, make sure they are aware of the state and
federal rules that ban movement of untreated firewood (www.maine.gov/firewood). Sources of
treated or local firewood can be found online at firewood scout http://firewoodscout.org/s/ME/.
More
information about emerald ash borer is available at:
http://www.maine.gov/eab
http://www.emeraldashborer.info/
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