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Quarantines

Wed, 04/21/2010
Posted by: S. Volkman
Comments: 0

In his bid for an Eagle Scout badge, Andrew Parent led a neighborhood survey for Asian longhorned beetle in Springfield, Massachusetts. Under the guidance of a USDA Forest Service agent, Parent mapped his neighborhood and rallied a crew to inspect all the trees for signs of beetle infestation.

Thu, 02/04/2010
Posted by: S. Volkman
Comments: 0

The state of Ohio just expanded its emerald ash borer quarantine to include 14 more counties -- and they mean business.

 

Fines are up to $4,000 for moving ash trees, parts of ash trees, and all hardwood firewood into or out of the restricted 67 counties in Ohio. Just one more reason not to move firewood!

 

But no matter what state you live in, the lesson is the same: Moving firewood helps tree-killing pests like the emerald ash borer move from one town to the next.

 

Tue, 06/09/2009
Posted by: L. Greenwood
Comments: 0

I've been reading a lot in the news about quarantines in various states- how they are expanding, how new infestations mean new quarantines, and other ideas. I think that the constant shifts in these borders should signal something to the public, and by that, I mean to YOU... you don't want to rely on a quarantine boundary to make your decisions. These things are imperfect, because nobody can ever know everything there is to know about where the bugs are.

 

Thu, 04/23/2009
Posted by: L. Greenwood
Comments: 0

The good people at the Minnesota Department of Agriculture (MDA) have put a firewood quarantine in the nearest county to the newly found Iowa infestation (Houston County, MN). While the EAB has yet to arrive (or, be found) in Minnesota, officials are wasting no time in starting preventative actions.

 

Fri, 03/27/2009
Posted by: L. Greenwood
Comments:

Canada has a proposed expansion of its EAB wood product quarantine zone. But is that good, or bad?

Here's the problem in a nutshell; when you create a quarantine zone, you are saying that people can't move stuff out of that area. But they are allowed to move things around within the area. So you must balance the risks within the area, to the risks presented outside of the area.

Tue, 10/28/2008
Posted by: L. Greenwood
Comments:

Today's editorial in the Boston Globe is correct; people taking firewood to camping areas, ski-side condos, or vacation homes could devastate New England.

It is a clear and present threat; just one piece of firewood taken from an infested area could devastate thousands of acres. Today's Boston Globe has a succinct editorial
that covers the topic very nicely in regards to the Worcester Asian longhorned beetle infestation.

Fri, 07/25/2008
Posted by: L. Greenwood
Comments:

The new Virginia quarantine of EAB has expanded to include Fairfax, Arlington, Fauquier, Loudoun and Prince William counties.

Todd Haymore, Commissioner of the Virginia Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (VDACS), signed orders Monday (July 21, 2008) expanding the Fairfax County quarantine area to include the counties of Arlington, Fauquier, Loudoun and Prince William and the cities of Alexandria, Fairfax City, Falls Church, Manassas and Manassas Park.

Tue, 07/22/2008
Posted by: L. Greenwood
Comments:

Two weeks ago we were reminded why we shouldn’t move firewood – even in the absence of an official regulation.

Two weeks ago we were reminded why we shouldn’t move firewood – even in the absence of an official regulation. A visiting forester discovered the emerald ash borer in Fairfax County Virginia. A second outbreak was detected days later 20 miles away. These previously unknown outbreaks had been there for several years and had already killed more than 20 trees.