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    Bill, organizer of stuff (wcbdata@vis.social)'s status on Wednesday, 22-May-2024 06:38:54 JSTBill, organizer of stuffBill, organizer of stuff

    I've deployed the ST beetles to our huge eastern hemlocks!

    This is the second season we've put them out to devour the hemlock woolly adelgid pest that has been destroying native hemlocks all over New England (and other places, too.) 100 of these little (smaller than a pinhead) buggers will clear two or three 80-foot hemlocks of adelgid, and with luck, we'll develop a resident colony!

    #gardening #trees
    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hemlock_woolly_adelgid

    In conversationabout a year ago from vis.socialpermalink

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      Hemlock woolly adelgid
      Adelges tsugae, the hemlock woolly adelgid () or HWA, is an insect of the order Hemiptera (true bugs) native to East Asia. It feeds by sucking sap from hemlock and spruce trees (Tsuga spp.; Picea spp.). In its native range, HWA is not a serious pest because populations are managed by natural predators and parasitoids and by host resistance. In eastern North America it is a destructive pest that threatens the eastern hemlock (Tsuga canadensis) and the Carolina hemlock (Tsuga caroliniana). HWA is also found in western North America, where it has likely been present for thousands of years. In western North America, it primarily attacks western hemlock Tsuga heterophylla and has only caused minor damage due to natural predators and host resistance. Accidentally introduced to North America from Japan, HWA was first found in the eastern United States near Richmond, Virginia, in 1951. The pest is now found from northern Georgia to coastal Maine and southwestern Nova Scotia as well as areas of western Michigan near the eastern Lake Michigan shoreline. As of 2015, HWA has affected...
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