Laserfiche WebLink
<br />Key Points and Summary <br />Recommendations <br /> <br />, Insecticides can effectively protect ash trees from EAB. <br /> <br />, Unnecessary insecticide applications waste money. If EAB has <br />not been detected within 10-15 miles, your trees are at low <br />risk. Be aware of the status of EAB in your location. Current <br />maps of known EAB populations can be found at www.emer- <br />aldashborer.info. Remember, however, that once a county is <br />quarantined, maps for that county are no longer updated. <br /> <br />, Trees that are already infested and showing signs of canopy <br />decline when treatments are initiated may continue to decline <br />in the first year after treatment, and then begin to show <br />improvement in the second year due to time lag associated <br />with vascular healing. Trees exhibiting more than 50 percent <br />canopy decline are unlikely to recover even if treated. <br /> <br />, Emamectin benzoate is the only product tested to date that <br />controls EAB for more than one year with a single application. <br />It also provided a higher level of control than other products <br />in side-by-side studies. <br /> <br />, Soil drenches and injections are most effective when made at <br />the base of the trunk. Imidacloprid applications made in the <br />spring or the fall have been shown to be equally effective. <br /> <br />, Soil injections should be no more than 2-4 inches deep, to <br />avoid placing the insecticide beneath feeder roots. <br /> <br />, To facilitate uptake, systemic trunk and soil insecticides <br />should be applied when the soil is moist but not saturated or <br />excessively dry. <br /> <br />, Research and experience suggest that effectiveness of insecti- <br />cides has been less consistent on larger trees. Research has <br />not been conducted on trees larger than 25-inch DBH. When <br />treating very large trees under high pest pressure, it may be <br />necessary to consider combining two treatment strategies. <br /> <br />, Xytect™ soil treatments are labeled for application at a <br />higher maximum rate than other imidacloprid formulations, <br />and we recommend that trees larger than 15-inch DBH be <br />treated using the highest labeled rate. Merit" imidacloprid <br />formulations are not labeled for use at this higher rate. When <br />treating larger trees with Merit" soil treatments, best results <br />will be obtained with two applications per year. Imidacloprid <br />formulations for homeowners (Bayer AdvancedTM Tree & <br />Shrub Insect Control and other generic formulations) can be <br />applied only once per year. <br /> <br />, Homeowners wishing to protect trees larger than 15-inch <br />DBH should consider having their trees professionally treated. <br /> <br />, Treatment programs must comply with any label restrictions <br />on the amount of insecticide that can be applied per acre in a <br />given year. <br /> <br />Herms. McCullough. Smitley, Sadoff Williamson, Nixon <br /> <br />, <br />