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  2. Emerald ash borer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emerald_ash_borer

    These insects have managed to eliminate close to 300,000 Ash trees in the National Capital Region in only nine years. This leaves only 80,000 ash trees left standing either due to luck or to some amount of resistance to the beetles. These forests used to have an extremely dense Ash population, having 17-18 trees per Hectare.

  3. Hylesinus aculeatus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hylesinus_aculeatus

    Hylesinus aculeatus, the eastern ash bark beetle, is a species of crenulate bark beetle in the family Curculionidae. It is found in North America. [1] [2] [3]

  4. Forest disturbance by invasive insects and diseases in the ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forest_disturbance_by...

    Dutch elm disease was spread by elm bark beetles, yet the tree mortality was caused by a pathogen. [4] Chestnut blight is a fungus spread through wind dispersal and rain splatter; the blight traveled up to 50 miles in a year by natural means. [5] Insect pests, once they reach the adult phase, have the ability to disperse by flight.

  5. Fraxinus americana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fraxinus_americana

    The emerald ash borer (Agrilus planipennis), also commonly known by the acronym EAB, is a green beetle native to Asia; its larvae kill ash trees. [1] In North America, the EAB is an invasive species, highly destructive to ash trees in its introduced range.

  6. Bark beetle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bark_beetle

    Bark beetles enter trees by boring holes in the bark of the tree, sometimes using the lenticels, or the pores plants use for gas exchange, to pass through the bark of the tree. [3] As the larvae consume the inner tissues of the tree, they often consume enough of the phloem to girdle the tree, cutting off the spread of water and nutrients.

  7. Neoclytus caprea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neoclytus_caprea

    The effects of host plant volatiles on attraction and mating in Neoclytus caprea was also studied, they found that host plant volatiles inhibited attraction in this hardwood feeding species of beetle. There is still no definite reasoning behind why the host plant volatiles induces this response in the attraction of banded ash borers.

  8. Cucujus clavipes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cucujus_clavipes

    Cucujus clavipes is known as the flat bark beetle. [1] [2] It is found throughout North America. [3] These are generally found near tree line [4] under bark [2] of dead poplar and ash trees. [5] C. clavipes are described as phloem-feeding [6] and often predators [1] of other small insects, such as wood-boring beetles, and mites. [5]

  9. Tetrastichus planipennisi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tetrastichus_planipennisi

    Tetrastichus planipennisi is a parasitic non-stinging wasp of the family Eulophidae which is native to North Asia.It is a parasitoid of the emerald ash borer (Agrilus planipennis Fairmaire, family Buprestidae), an invasive species which has destroyed tens of millions of ash trees in its introduced range in North America.