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Links and Resources
Official State Quarantine (map)

Official National Quarantine (map)

Regulatory Q & A

Ash Tree Waste Disposal Sites (map)

Best Management Practices for Known EAB Infested Areas

National Emerald Ash Borer Website

MDA Emerald Ash Borer Website

DNR Emerald Ash Borer Website

Interactive Survey Map

EAB Regulatory Review Archive

Community Preparedness Manual

My Minnesota Woods Website

EAB Biological Control Website
EAB Gallery by Toby Petrice

August 18, 2011
EAB Regulatory Review

Winona workshop on EAB

thousand cankers, gypsy moth,

Oriental bittersweet and more!  

 

Hands-on workshop to learn about devastating invasive forest pests  

 

What

A workshop for hands-on time with the experts to learn about these important and potentially devastating invasive forest pests. Learn what to look for and what to do if you find them.    

 

Who Should Attend

This class provides credit for the Woodland Advisor program and Master Gardeners. Others interested in learning more about watching for signs and symptoms of these invasive forest pests and identifying ash brush, logs, and trees should also attend.   

 

When and Where

Tuesday, August 30, 2011 from
9:00 a.m. - 2:30 p.m.
Holzinger Lodge, 651 W. Lake Blvd (north of Huff on W. Lake Blvd), Winona

 

Registration

The workshop is open to the public for a fee of $10 which includes lunch; pre-registration is required.  

 

Contact Mary Jane Stearns to register: mstearns@umn.edu or 507-536-6310.

 

The class will be mostly outdoors, so please dress for the weather. After lunch we will carpool to an oriental bittersweet infestation.

Minnesota Department of

Agriculture confirms EAB

infestation in  Shoreview 

 

ST. PAUL, Minn. - The Minnesota Department of Agriculture (MDA) confirmed an emerald ash borer infestation in an ash tree in a Shoreview residential neighborhood.  The infestation was discovered after the property owner noticed signs of a potential infestation and contacted the City of Shoreview. City officials then called MDA.

 

Shoreview becomes the fourth Twin Cities community to have a confirmed emerald ash borer (EAB) infestation, joining St. Paul, Minneapolis and Falcon Heights.  MDA has also confirmed an infestation in rural Houston County, in southeastern Minnesota.  The new Shoreview infestation is notable because it is located nearly 10 miles from the nearest known infestation. However, it is not known at this time how the EAB arrived at the new site. MDA will be conducting surveys of the area and will be working with the City of Shoreview and Ramsey County to determine a best course of action for slowing the spread of the insect.

 

Read the full article on the EAB infestation in Shoreview  

 

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MDA protects state's walnut trees from deadly disease     

ST. PAUL, Minn. - Walnut wood is no longer allowed into

Thousand Cankers Gallery 
Thousand cankers gallery
Minnesota if imported from 11 different states known to have thousand cankers disease (TCD). A temporary exterior quarantine announced in February was made permanent this week by Minnesota Department of Agriculture (MDA) Commissioner Dave Frederickson. The quarantine was issued as a preventative measure to help stop TCD from coming to Minnesota.

 

 

TCD is caused by a fungus carried by a tree pest called the walnut twig beetle.  The beetle attacks the walnut tree, introducing the fungus while it tunnels under the bark.  This results in small cankers, or dead areas, under the bark.  As more beetles attack the tree, more cankers grow together and hinder the tree's ability to move water, eventually killing it.  To date, TCD has been found in Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Tennessee, Virginia,

Washington, and Utah.  The MDA quarantine restricts movement of products potentially harboring TCD from those states and from other potentially infested areas into Minnesota.  Announcement of the formal quarantine comes within a month of the detection of TCD in the state of Virginia, which is only the second state within the native range of eastern black walnut to report the disease.

 

The list of products covered by the quarantine includes live walnut trees, walnut logs, walnut lumber, walnut nursery stock, wood chips and mulch made from walnut wood, walnut branches and roots, packaging materials made from walnut wood, and all hardwood firewood.  The quarantine does not apply to walnut nuts, nutmeat, walnut hulls, finished products made from walnut wood without bark, or processed lumber that is 100 percent bark-free, and kiln-dried with square edges.  Several other states within the native range of eastern black walnut have similar exterior quarantines in place.

Large portion of trees needed to be transported not only out of the quarantine, but out of the state.


Read more about thousand cankers disease in Minnesota 

 

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Bur Oak Blight Found in 

 

Pennington County 


Last week, bur oak blight (BOB) was found and identified in Pennington County, a significant distance from other known infestations in Minnesota. BOB was first discovered in Minnesota in 2010, and has been identified in Ramsey, Hennepin, Sherburne, Mille Lacs, Washington and Anoka Counties. This is a new disease of Bur Oaks and is caused by a new and unnamed species of the fungus Tubakia sp. 

 

Gardeners should be on the look out for bur oak trees with browning leaf veins and brown wedge shaped lesions on leaves. Symptoms typically appear in the lower canopy and progress upwards each year. Leaf blight symptoms generally appear in July and August. If you suspect a bur oak is infected with Bur Oak Blight call the Minnesota Department of Agriculture Arrest a Pest Hotline: 1-800-545-6684

 

Regulatory Updates

It is illegal to drive with regulated material outside of the quarantine. This includes Highway 7, just north of Victoria. We have been and will continue to monitor this stretch of highway.  

 

The following inspections were conducted:

  • Statewide: 23
  • Hennepin/Ramsey Quarantine: 37
  • Firewood Surveys Received: 9 

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MDA Certified Firewood

cert 

This certificate shows MDA has tested and certified the facility responsible for heat treating firewood. This firewood is safe from emerald ash borer and is allowed to move throughout Minnesota.

 

If certified firewood dealers would like to advertise using MDA's certified logo or have questions about advertising, please contact Liz Erickson at liz.erickson@state.mn.us.

We Need Your Help! 

If you notice any vehicle that is carrying hardwood firewood across quarantine boundaries, please get their license plate number and call us! We routinely follow-up on these tips with letters and other information, and we watch for repeat offenders. Enforcement of this quarantine can be made more effective with the help of everyday citizens.   

Please contact the Arrest the Pest Hotline by calling

888-545-6684   or e-mailing 

arrest.the.pest@state.mn.us

Ask to be put in contact with the EAB regulatory staff.

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