Ash infested with Emerald Ash Borer |
Ash tree on
brink of extinction in Northeast US
Emerald Ash Borer larva |
Five
prominent species of ash tree in the eastern US have been driven to the brink
of extinction from years of lethal attack by a beetle, a scientific group says.
Tens of millions of trees in the US and Canada have already succumbed, and the
toll may eventually reach more than 8 billion, the International Union for
Conservation of Nature said Thursday.
Ash trees
are a major part of eastern forests and urban streets, providing yellow and
purplish leaves to the bounty of fall colors. Their timber is used for making
furniture and sports equipment like baseball bats and hockey sticks.
The rampage
of the emerald ash borer is traced to the late 1990s, when it arrived from Asia
in wood used in shipping pallets that showed up in Michigan. Asian trees have
evolved defenses against the insect, but the new North American home presented
it with vulnerable trees and no natural predators.
“The
populations are exploding,” said Murphy Westwood of the Morton Arboretum in
Lisle, Illinois. Infestations have been detected in 30 states. “It’s a very
efficient killer,” Westwood said. “As the ash borer moves through a forest, it
will completely kill all of the mature ash trees within three or four years.”
She led the
scientific assessment that resulted in classifying the five species as
critically endangered — meaning they are facing an extremely high risk of
extinction in the wild. The change appears on the IUCN’s Red List, considered by
scientists the official index of what animals and plants are in danger of
disappearing. The species are the green, black, white, pumpkin and blue ash.
A sixth
species, the Carolina ash, was put in the less serious category of “endangered”
because it might find some refuge from the infestation in the southern part of
its range, which includes Florida, Texas and Cuba, Westwood said.
Dan Herms,
an entomologist at Ohio State University who studies the ash borer, called it
“the most devastating insect ever to invade North American forests.” It’s
already the most expensive because it has killed so many urban trees that had
to be removed, disposed of and replaced, which has cost billions of dollars, he
said.
Herms, who
was not involved in the IUCN project, said he’s not sure the ash species will
literally disappear. But he said they could become “functionally extinct,” with
populations too small to play a significant role in the environment for
benefits like providing shelter and filtering water.
September
14, 2017
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