Purdue Landscape Report: By now, the emerald ash borer (EAB) invasion is an old story for landscapes and forests in the Midwest. Since EAB was first found in North America in 2002 more millions of ash ...
This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts. Dozens of different species of ash trees grow around the world, all part ...
My neighbor lives on a rolling hillside dominated by lawn and trees. He has taken out a lot of the scrub over the years to show off trees of various species and age, and the place has the feel of an ...
The invasive insects have already killed "tens of millions of ash trees" across the United States, according to Minnesota ...
A small beetle is responsible for the death and decline of billions of ash trees in North America, and the race is on to stop it from causing further damage. The USDA is hoping to spread the word so ...
MANKATO — There isn’t a partridge or a pear tree, but Mankato’s environment has received a significant Christmas present this December. The state Department of Natural Resources and city officials ...
Kris Dullmer of Ash Tree Solutions, right, injects an insecticide into an ash tree named Big Jim in the Catamount Community Forest to combat the emerald ash borer in Williston on Tuesday, June 25.
The clock is ticking for the few healthy ash tree groves still in existence around D.C. Twenty years ago an invasive pest arrived in the area, hidden away inside a shipment of ash trees headed for a ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. The emerald ash borer (Agrilus planipennis) was first identified as an invasive species in the US in 2002. It is now found in over ...