Calapooia Watershed Council

Working to Improve the health of the watershed

Oregon Department of Forestry EAB Fact Sheet
Risk Map
Look-alikes

invasive pest of concern

emerald ash borer

Emerald ash borer (Agrilus planipennis Fairmaire), referred to as EAB a highly destructive invasive forest pest that has killed over 100 million ash trees in the eastern U.S since its first detection near Detroit, Michigan, in 2002.

Several North American ash species (Fraxinus spp.) are at risk, including the native Oregon ash (Fraxinus latifolia) and non‐native ash species widely planted as landscape trees.

EAB was detected in Oregon on June 30, 2022, in Forest Grove.

The Emerald Ash Borer (EAB) is a very small but very destructive beetle. Metallic green in color, its slender body measures 1/2-inch long and 1/8-inch wide. The average adult beetle can fit easily on a penny. There are several lookalikes, so it is critical to accurately identify before taking steps to eradicate.

Background

Ash trees are one of the most valuable and abundant North American woodland trees: estimates of total number of ash trees in the United States alone range between seven and nine billion. The emerald ash borer has destroyed 40 million ash trees in Michigan alone and tens of millions throughout other states and Canada. Small trees can die as soon as one to two years after infestation, while larger infested trees can survive for three to four years. Heavy infestations of larval borers speed up the devastation of formerly healthy trees.

After its initial detection in the eastern U.S., EAB  spread quickly beyond  containment lines despite  several aggressive  eradication attempts. Only  20 years after its arrival in  North America, five eastern  U.S. ash species –  green, white, black, blue  and pumpkin ash – are  already listed as “critically  endangered” by the International Union for  Conservation of Nature. In  Oregon, efforts are  underway to determine the  extent and spread of  EAB in and around Forest  Grove as well as efforts to  conserve native Oregon  ash from the threat of EAB. 

Detecting & Reporting

EAB is more often detected  by keen eyes  than by traps. In 2015,  Oregon Department of  Forestry, with financial aid  from U.S. Forest Service  and in conjunction with  Oregon State University Extension, Oregon  Department of Agriculture and the USDA Animal and  Plant Health Inspection  Service, developed a  program to train over 500  of Oregon’s natural  resource specialists from  local and state agencies on  how to detect and  report EAB and other  invasive pests. 

Wildland Forest Pest

Oregon ash is known from research trials to be highly  susceptible to EAB. Oregon ash is a key part of riparian  forests and wetlands west  of the Cascades. It grows  along streams, rivers and wetlands below 2,000’  elevation, with 80 percent of the species occurring  below 1,000’ elevation. At  the lowest elevations  (below 500’) it forms pockets of pure stands.

EAB is capable of killing  entire stands of these ash. Oregon ash occurs on both lands zoned for forestry  and for agriculture. Oregon ash is widely used for stream restoration  plantings due to its ability  to stabilize soil, control  sediment, and moderate  stream temperatures. It is assumed that widespread  death of Oregon ash will  lead to ecological changes  in water quality, stream temperatures and riparian  plant communities.

Oregon ash has limited use in Oregon as a timber species. However, a  number of small specialty mills process this hardwood for  woodworking. 

Urban & Community Pest

Besides native Oregon ash, susceptible EAB hosts in  Oregon include common  landscape ash species:  green, white, narrow‐leafed (especially the cultivar  ‘Raywood’), and European  ash. EAB is also known to  feed on botanical relatives  of ash, including white  fringetree (Chionanthus virginicus) and cultivated  olive (Olea europaea). In the eastern U.S., EAB has  caused over $2 billion in  damages. Most of the costs  are from losses in residential property values,  tree removal and replanting in urban areas.  EAB moves quickly; it can  cause nearly complete  mortality of ash trees within about 10 years after  detection. 

D-shaped exit holes are one indicator that a tree is infested with the EAB. These holes are 1/8" wide and can be oriented in any direction. Native borers will leave exit holes that are round or oval in shape and can vary in size.

Splitting bark that reveals S-shaped tunnels are another good way to identify an EAB infestation. These "serpentine" galleries (tunnels) are made by the EAB larvae beneath the bark and are approximately 1/8" wide and are packed with frass (a fine mixture of sawdust and insect excrement.) As EAB larvae feed, trees attempt to create callus tissue around larval galleries, which can cause the bark to split vertically and reveal these tunnels

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