• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
Marcellus News

Marcellus News

Stories Matter

  • Home
  • News
  • Obituaries
  • Back Issues
  • Visit
  • Contact
  • Subscribe
  • Login

Heads up! Time to check trees for invasive beetle

August 16, 2022 By Marcellus News Leave a Comment

August is a great time to enjoy the outdoors, and it’s also the best time to spot the invasive Asian longhorned beetle as adults emerge from trees. That’s why the U.S. Department of Agriculture is declaring August as “Tree Check Month.” Checking trees for the beetle and the damage it causes is one way you can protect trees and help the USDA’s efforts to eliminate this beetle from the United States.

 The Michigan departments of Agriculture and Rural Development; Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy; and Natural Resources are joining the USDA in asking people to take just 10 minutes this month to check trees around homes for the beetle or any signs of damage.

The Asian longhorned beetle, or ALB for short, is a non-native wood-boring beetle considered invasive in North America because it attacks 12 types of hardwood trees, including maples, elms, horse chestnuts, birches and willows. Here, there are no predators or diseases to keep ALB populations in check. In its larval stage, the insect feeds inside tree trunks and branches during the colder months. The beetle creates tunnels as it feeds, and then it chews its way out as an adult in the warmer months.


The Asian longhorned beetle, an invasive species, can cause significant damage to forest resources. The USDA has declared August “Tree Check Month” and asks for assistance in reporting any sightings of this beetle.


Infested trees do not recover and eventually die. They also can become safety hazards since branches can drop and trees can fall, especially during storms.

You can help

Although this invasive beetle has not yet been discovered in Michigan, it is crucial we keep an eye out for it. Discovering early signs of infestation can prevent widespread damage to the state’s forest resources, urban landscapes and maple syrup production.

The USDA recently reported the infestations at 10 of those locations have been eradicated.

Look for signs

Whenever you are outdoors, take time to look at the trees around you for signs of the Asian longhorned beetle, including:

• Round exit holes – about the diameter of a pencil – found in tree trunks and branches.

• Shallow oval or round scars in the bark, where the adult beetle chewed an egg site.

• Material that looks like wood shavings lying on the ground around the tree or in the branches.

• Dead branches or limbs falling from an otherwise healthy-looking tree.

Look for the beetle

Adult Asian longhorned beetles are distinctively large, ranging from 3/4 to 1 1/2 inches in length, not including their long antennae. The beetles are shiny black, with random white blotches or spots, and their antennae have alternating black and white segments. They have six legs that can be black or partly blue, with blue coloration sometimes extending to their feet.

Be aware of look-alikes

  Several beetles and bugs native to Michigan often are mistaken for the Asian longhorned beetle, but there are differences to be aware of:

• The white-spotted pine sawyer has a distinctive white spot below the base of its head – between its wings – and is brownish in color.

• The cottonwood borer is about the same size as the Asian longhorned beetle and is also black and white, but it has a pattern of single, broad black stripes down each wing, and its antennae are all dark.

• The northeastern pine sawyer reaches up to 2 inches in length, has very long antennae and is gray in color.

• The eastern eyed click beetle has distinctive eye circles on the back of its head. It rolls over when threatened, then clicks and makes a flipping movement to get back on its feet.

Anyone observing an Asian longhorned beetle, or a tree appearing damaged by it, is asked to report it. If possible, capture the beetle in a jar, take photos, record the location and report it as soon as possible at AsianLonghornedBeetle.com or contact MDARD at 800-292-3939 or MDA-info@Michigan.gov.

More information can be found at Michigan.gov/ALB.

Filed Under: Top News Tagged With: Free

About Marcellus News

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

© 2023 Marcellus News | All Rights Reserved Website Design by Pixelvine Creative

 
Subscribe
Select Your Payment Cycle
Please Signup
    Strength: Very Weak

    (Use Cropper to set image and <br/>use mouse scroller for zoom image.)

    Select Your Payment Type
    How you want to pay?

    Payment Summary


    Selected Plan:
    Plan Amount :
    Final Payable Amount:
     
    • Home
    • News
    • Obituaries
    • Back Issues
    • Visit
    • Contact
    • Subscribe
    • Login