Orange County NC Website
NCDA &CS News Release: Five counties join quarantine area for emerald ash borer Page 1 of 2 <br />Public Affairs Home <br />News Releases <br />(.) SHARE <br />Agricultural Review <br />FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE <br />TUESDAY, JULY 21, 2015 <br />In The Field Blog <br />CONTACT: Phillip Wilson, plant pest administrator <br />Photos and logos <br />NCDA &CS Plant Industry Division <br />Century Farm Family <br />919 - 707 -3753 <br />Agricultural Hall of Fame <br />Durham, Graham, Johnston, Orange and Wilson counties <br />Sign -up for News <br />join quarantine area for emerald ash borer <br />Releases <br />Contact Us <br />RALEIGH — Five more counties have come under quarantine rules restricting the movement of hardwood <br />firewood, ash nursery stock and other ash materials following the discovery of more trees infested with <br />emerald ash borers. The addition of Durham, Graham, Johnston, Orange and Wilson counties brings the total <br />number of counties under quarantine to 12. Agriculture Commissioner Steve Troxler signed an emergency <br />quarantine order allowing the expansion. <br />/p()ININIfE(' ll" w/ <br />NClDA&/pS <br />Staff with the N.C. Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services found insects in Wilson County close to <br />Contentnea Creek and in several infested trees in the northeastern part of Orange County. No insects were <br />found in Johnston County, but distinctive galleries, or serpentine tunnels under the bark, in trees along the <br />Little River indicate the presence of EAB. No evidence of EAB has been found yet in Durham County, but the <br />close proximity to the county line of finds in neighboring counties has led officials to quarantine that county as <br />� <br />u I <br />i« �} 10 �awaw� <br />�lumu <br />well. A U.S. Forest Service employee found emerald ash borers in a trap in Graham County, marking the first <br />find in the Western part of the state. <br />"This is a devastating pest to ash trees, eventually killing the trees where the insects are found," Troxler said. <br />"We are continuing to monitor other counties for this highly destructive pest through trapping and visual <br />assessment of trees. We will be pulling traps in early August and it is possible we will find sites in more <br />counties when we do. We ask the public not to disturb the purple, triangle- shaped traps if they see them." <br />The beetle was first detected in the United States in Michigan in 2002. It is responsible for the death or <br />decline of tens of millions of ash trees across the country. <br />Under the state quarantine, all hardwood firewood and plants and plant parts of the ash tree -- including <br />living, dead, cut or fallen, green lumber, stumps, roots, branches and composted and uncomposted chips -- <br />cannot be moved outside the county. Only firewood that has been treated by an approved U.S. Department of <br />Agriculture method, such as treating firewood in an approved kiln, can be moved outside the quarantine area. <br />The Plant Industry Division and the N.C. Forest Service are working in cooperation with the U.S. Department <br />of Agriculture's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service. <br />Symptoms of emerald ash borer in ash trees include a general decline in the appearance of the tree, such as <br />thinning from the top down and loss of leaves. Clumps of shoots, also known as epicormic sprouts, emerging <br />from the trunk of the tree and increased woodpecker activity are other symptoms. The emerald ash borer is <br />not the only pest that can cause these. <br />Emerald ash borers overwinter as larvae. The adult beetle is one - fourth to a half -inch long and is slender and <br />metallic green. When the adults emerge from a tree, they leave behind a D- shaped exit hole. The larvae can <br />also create serpentine tunneling marks, known as feeding galleries, which are found under the bark of the <br />infested trees. <br />Home and landowners are encouraged to report any symptomatic activity in ash trees to the NCDA &CS Plant <br />Industry Division hotline at 1- 800 - 206 -9333 or by email at newpest @ncagr.gov. The pest can affect any of the <br />four types of ash trees grown in the state. <br />-aea -1 <br />NCDA &CS Public Affairs Division, Brian Long, Director <br />Mailing Address:1001 Mail Service Center, Raleigh NC 27699 -1001 <br />Physical Address: 2 West Edenton Street, Raleigh NC 27601 <br />Phone: (919) 707 -3001; FAX: (919) 733 -5047 <br />http: / /www.ncagr.gov /paffairs /release / 2015 /fivecountyexpansionEAB.htm 7/30/2015 <br />