Ash tree variability may offer restoration path post-beetle decimation
January 08, 2025
January 08, 2025
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pennsylvania, Jan. 8 -- Pennsylvania State University issued the following news:
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. -- The invasive emerald ash borer, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, was first found in the United States in southeast Michigan in 2002. In the decades since, the wood-boring beetle has spread east and west across the U.S. and Canada, killing tens of millions of ash trees, causing one of the costliest forest insect invasions to date. More than 90% of . . .
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. -- The invasive emerald ash borer, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, was first found in the United States in southeast Michigan in 2002. In the decades since, the wood-boring beetle has spread east and west across the U.S. and Canada, killing tens of millions of ash trees, causing one of the costliest forest insect invasions to date. More than 90% of . . .