Emerald ash borer plaguing Montreal trees - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 05:13 AM | Calgary | -13.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

Emerald ash borer plaguing Montreal trees

More than 200,000 ash trees in Montreal are now at the mercy of a swarm of shiny green bugs.

Nearly impossible to eradicate once the insect moves in, scientists say

The emerald ash borer has been in North America for just over a decade. (CBC)

More than 200,000 ash trees in Montreal are now at the mercy of a swarm ofshiny green bugs.

The emerald ash borer, a type of beetle responsible for destroying the ash populations of certain spots in Quebec and Ontario, has been in North America for just over a decade.

Robert Lavalle, a pest management research scientist for Natural Resources Canada, said one in five trees in Montreal is ashthat adds up to 200,000 trees, not including the ones on private property and on Mount-Royal.

Native to Asia and east Russia, the emerald ash borer made its first Canadian appearance in Ontario in 2002. The insect has been causing serious problems in Quebec since it was discovered in Carignan, on Montreals south shore, in 2008.

Lavalle said that once the emerald ash borer has moved into an area, its almost impossible to eradicate. According to the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, the larvae destroys "the layer under the bark thats responsible for transporting nutrients and water throughout the tree."

Once infested, an ash tree usually dies in two to five years.

In an effort to curb the bugs presence in Montreal, Lavalle and his team have set up traps in several Montreal-area boroughs and municipalities: Rosemont, Cte-des-Neiges, St-Laurent, Ville-Marie, Pointe-Claire and St-Bruno.

"I selected those boroughs simply because there are ash," he said.

"We unfortunately found that the highest number of insects in our traps was in Cte-des-Neiges."

The public can help limit the damage, Lavalle said, by not moving any wood or firewood from one part of the city to another.

"People should respect the advertisement made by the city or CFIA saying do not move any wood from an infested area to a non infested, but basically, do not move any wood," he said.