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These tiny wasps could help save trees threatened by emerald ash borer
Washington Post
Apr. 4, 2022 7:00 am
Up close, the emerald ash borer is a strikingly beautiful insect. It's also a dangerous pest.
The metallic green beetles entered the United States from northeast Asia in the 1990s, likely hitching a ride on wood-packing materials. By the time researchers identified them in 2002, the insects were widespread. They've destroyed millions of ash trees across North America.
Many of those have been in Iowa, home to several kinds of ash tree, including the white ash, green ash, blue ash, black ash and showy mountain ash, according to Iowa State University Extension and Outreach. A report from the city found that, before the emerald ash borer arrived, one in every four trees in Cedar Rapids was an ash tree.
To spot an ash tree, look for a tree 80 to 90 feet tall with branches growing exactly opposite of each other and bunches of at least five leaves that grow together.
Ash borers damage trees by "essentially both dehydrating and starving the tree," says Elizabeth Barnes, an exotic-forest pest educator in the Purdue University Department of Entomology. Adult ash borers lay eggs on ash trees. The larvae then tunnel under the bark to feed on the tissue that transports the trees' nutrients. (Larvae are the juvenile form of an insect.)
You'll see zigzag patterns in the bark of affected trees, Barnes says. When the trees fall, "it looks like they're exploding. They just absolutely shatter."
But there's good news. As researchers studied the emerald ash borer, they noticed something interesting: Both China and the Russian Far East had abundant ash trees and ash borers, yet fewer trees were dying there.
Researchers think there are two reasons. First, because trees in those regions evolved alongside the insects, the trees probably developed defenses against them, says Jian Duan. Duan is a research entomologist with the Beneficial Insects Introduction Research Unit at the United States Department of Agriculture.
Second, with insect pests such as ash borers, "there are a lot of natural enemies," Duan says. Researchers suspected the beetles had a predator that was keeping them in check. If that was true, a biocontrol program — bringing the predator to the pest — could help trees in the United States.
"The purpose of biocontrol is not to eradicate the emerald ash borer," Duan says. Instead the goal is to keep the pests' populations low enough for trees to survive.
Scientists discovered the ash borers' natural enemies are small parasitoid wasps, native to China and the Russian Far East. Parasitoids (para-sih-toyds) lay their eggs inside or on the host — in this case, ash borer eggs or larvae. The wasp babies feed on and ultimately kill the host.
The wasps were taken to a quarantine facility, where they were tested to ensure that they would attack only ash borers, not other species. Then researchers worked in the lab to produce thousands of wasps, plus their food source — emerald ash borers. Finally, to make sure the wasps connected with their target, scientists carefully synchronized their release into nature with the ash borers' activity.
Because the wasps are only interested in emerald ash borers, "they don't sting," Duan says. "Their purpose is to reproduce." When an adult wasp locates ash borer eggs or larvae, it uses a tubelike organ called an ovipositor to deposit its babies.
U.S. regulators have approved four wasp species for biocontrol: three from China and one from Russia. At test sites in Michigan and New England, the wasps are starting to make an impact, reducing ash borer populations.
Though the pests greatly outnumber the wasps for now, Duan is optimistic. "We still think the natural enemy eventually will catch up with emerald ash borer populations."
An adult emerald ash borer feeds on an ash leaf. The beetles eat only ash trees, and they have killed millions of them in North America. Scientists have found wasps that feed on the beetles' young, keeping the ash borers from killing all the ash trees in Asia and Russia. They are experimenting on releasing those wasps in parts of the United States. MUST CREDIT: Jian Duan/USDA
This emerald ash borer larva was eaten by wasp larvae. The wasps don't kill all the emerald ash borers, just enough to save some of the ash trees. MUST CREDIT: Jian Duan/USDA