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Great Lakes Today was created to highlight issues affecting the lakes. The main partners are WBFO (Buffalo), ideastream (Cleveland) and WXXI (Rochester).Browse more coverage here. Major funding for Great Lakes Today is provided by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, a private corporation funded by the American People. Additional funding comes from the Northeast Ohio Regional Sewer District.

USDA warns about the invasive Asian Longhorned Beetle

by ANGELICA A. MORRISON / Asian Longhorned Beetle posting at the North Tonawanda Audubon Nature Preserve

The US Department of Agriculture is asking residents along the Great Lakes corridor and beyond to watch out for an invader- the Asian Longhorned Beetle (ALB).Angelica A. Morrison reportsAt the North Tonawanda Audubon Nature Preserve, located north of Buffalo, environmental workers and volunteers hung black and white warning signs about the bug.The definitely creepy. It has long antennas with white stripes.  And a black glossy exterior with asymmetrical white spots. It can fly, but it doesn't like to, said Andrea Locke the coordinator for WNY Prism, the organization was hosting the invasive clean up.“This particular bug it’s impressive. It’s a large bug, it’s about an inch to an inch and a half in size if folks see it they’re going to notice. It’s just a matter of connecting that noticing the bug and understanding that this is something that people need to report," Locke said.Essentially, the insect eats the tree from inside out. It burrows deep inside and lays eggs. The larva grows into an adult. It emerges leaving an exit hole. It’s damage trees can’t usually recover from.But, what does the damage look like?You might see dime sized holes in the trunk or branches. Sometimes you’ll see tunneling marks. There’ll also be a sawdust like material on the ground."The Asian Longhorned Beetle is one of the most destructive forest pests that could have entered the United States," said Rhonda Santos of the USDA.The organization is trying to eliminate the bug. They inspect and remove infested trees. They also set up quarantine areas.  So far, the bug has led to the loss of more than 160 thousand trees  across the nation.It was first detected in the US, in 1996.  Experts believe it came from wooden packing material, used in cargo shipments from China."When we find an Asian Longhorned Beetle infestation it usually takes at least 10 years to be able to eliminate the beetle from that area. That goes back to finding every infested tree, removing it and, continuing to search the remaining trees, to make sure the beetle is not there," she said.The bug was eliminated from areas in Illinois and New Jersey. There are still active infestations in Ohio, Massachusetts, New York and Canada. This summer, the quarantine in southwest Ohio was expanded. Santos says they were proactively searching about a mile outside the zone and found a but.“There’s a concern that this insect can be where we don’t know it to be already. And certainly for the Great Lakes region, where you have so many trees," Santos said. "Particularly, in the northern border of the us those trees to right into Canada and because we have so many trees, that’s a greater risk that this pest could go after those trees in that area.”Report findings at www.aisianlonghornedbeetle.com. Copyright 2017 Great Lakes Today. To see more, visit Great Lakes Today.

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