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Emerald ash borer was recently found in Milbank, now one of 13 communities in South Dakota where the pest has been detected.
Annual cold snaps have kept some invasive tree pests in check, but outbreaks could become more common with warming ...
A post on the City of Fargo Facebook page says that Emerald Ash Borer has been confirmed across the Red River, putting the trees in Fargo at serious risk. Some neighborhoods in Fargo have a street ...
The Minnesota Department of Agriculture has quarantined Carlton County after discovering infestations of an invasive ash-tree killing beetle across the southeastern portion of the county. Even though ...
The 2025 Emerald Ash Borer Treatment Project will treat approximately 926 ash trees and will take up to two weeks to complete. These treatments will protect the trees from EAB for three years. The ...
Oregon Field Guide is available to stream on pbs.org and the free PBS App, available on iPhone, Apple TV, Android TV, Android smartphones, Amazon Fire TV, Amazon Fire Tablet, Roku, Samsung Smart ...
Adult emerald ash borers are metallic green with a coppery red or purple abdomen and are about 1/2 inch in length. Larvae are cream-colored with brown heads, flat, and segmented.
Adult emerald ash borers are metallic green with a coppery red or purple abdomen and are about 1/2 inch in length. Larvae are cream-colored with brown heads, flat, and segmented.
A pest that last made a major appearance in Kansas nearly a decade ago is back — and it’s feasting on ash trees across the state. Gov. Whitmer Responds as Trump Considers Kidnap Plot Pardon ...
Emerald Ash Borer continues to move through Maine, decimating ash trees Mexico's Claudia Sheinbaum Draws Red Line for Donald Trump Target pulls the plug on self-checkout amid shoplifting surge ...
There’s a tree killer on the loose in Oregon, and nobody knows how to stop it. An invasive green beetle called the emerald ash borer arrived in the Midwest from Asia, and it’s killed over 100 ...
GOLDEN VALLEY, Minn. — Ash trees are everywhere across Minnesota's landscape, and the reality is that they won't be here much longer, due to the emerald ash borer. If your favorite ash isn’t ...