Ag Line: Asian ambrosia beetle
By Wade Parker County Extension Coordinator
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Often times we plant trees in our landscapes and yards for shade, beauty, or to just plain watch them grow. In fact, a landscape scene is not complete unless you have some Japanese Maples, Bradford Pears or an oak tree or two. However, people don't seem to pay attention to their trees until something goes wrong with them. They look out their window and all of the leaves have fallen off and the tree is dead! Trees in the landscape must be maintained, and a close eye must be kept on them for susceptible insects and diseases.
There is one insect in particular out there stalking your prized landscape tree. It is very tiny but it can bring even large trees down. The insect is an Asian ambrosia beetle. Asian ambrosia beetles are illegal immigrants that were accidentally imported to the United States in some peach trees in North Carolina that arrived from China in 1974. Since then, this insect has spread all over the U.S. and has caused millions of dollars in tree loss.
The female Asian ambrosia beetle emerges in spring from her winter habitat inside an infested tree and travels to a suitable nearby shrub or tree. She looks for a small plant or limb 1 to 2 inches thick and begins to bore into it. She moves fast eating her way through an inch of wood per day.
As the insect eats her way through the tree, she ejects sawdust out of the entrance hole. The sawdust exiting the hole forms toothpicklike
protrusions. This is the key diagnostic feature of Asian ambrosia beetle damage. Scout for this sawdust in early spring on trees and shrubs.
The insect doesn't actually eat the wood but excavates tunnels that serve as habitat. She introduces a fungus into the tunnel, which is carried on her back from her last home. When her eggs hatch, the larvae feed on the fungus. It is this fungus that kills the tree eventually. It clogs the vascular system of the plant causing it to wilt and eventually die.
Many species of trees and shrubs are susceptible to this beetle. I have observed them attacking tulip poplars, oaks, ornamental cherry, crape myrtle, r e d b u d , hickory and J a p a n e s e maple. Asian a m b r o s i a beetles will attack almost any broadleaf tree or shrub that is suitable size, whether healthy or not.
Almost the entire lifecycle of the insect is spent inside the plant, making the beetle hard to control with insecticides. The only time out of the tree is when it emerges in early spring to either re-infect the same tree or to seek out a new one. There are traps that can be used to monitor the insect's emergence in February.
Asian ambrosia beetles must be controlled, but how? There are no systemic insecticides that will kill the beetles in the trees. Once in the tree, the beetle itself is harmless. It is the fungus that actually kills the tree. Infested trees will most likely die eventually.
The best way to control AAB damage is by prevention. Trunk sprays using pyrethroid insecticides applied in late February, or when the first beetle is trapped, offers protection. Products available to commercial pesticide applicators such as Pounce, Astro and Onyx all show great promise in controlling this pest. Homeowners should use outdoor tree and shrub insecticides containing imidacloprid or bifenthrin. Homeowners should remove affected plants, or plant parts, and they should be burned. The trunks of remaining plants should be treated with an appropriate insecticide and monitored.
I feel that Asian ambrosia beetles are a serious pest and all trees must be monitored closely. A serious landscaper will use the traps as a management tool, which will lead to the proper prevention.
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