|  The Illinois Department of Agriculture announced Monday that it has 
			received confirmation that a beetle collected on the county 
			fairgrounds in Morrison is an emerald ash borer. An alert forestry 
			technician with the Illinois Department of Natural Resources spotted 
			a distressed ash tree on the property and notified IDOA staff, who 
			found a dead adult beetle in the bark. The beetle was submitted to 
			the USDA's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, which 
			confirmed it as EAB. "We have monitoring traps throughout 
			Whiteside and its neighboring counties," said Scott Schirmer, EAB 
			program manager. "Thus far, the infestation appears highly 
			localized. In fact, we have not even been able to confirm EAB in any 
			other ash trees on the property." 
			 The emerald ash borer is a small, metallic-green beetle native to 
			Asia. Its larvae burrow into the bark of ash trees, causing the 
			trees to starve and eventually die. Since the first detection of the 
			pest near Detroit, Mich., in 2002, it has killed more than 25 
			million ash trees.  The beetle often is difficult to detect, especially in newly 
			infested trees. Signs of infestation include thinning and yellowing 
			leaves, "D"-shaped holes in the bark of the trunk or branches, and 
			basal shoots. Anyone who suspects an ash tree has been infested 
			should contact their county Extension office, their village forester 
			or the Illinois Department of Agriculture.  Forty-one Illinois counties currently are under quarantine to 
			prevent the artificial or "human-assisted" spread of the beetle 
			through the movement of infested wood and nursery stock. 
			Specifically, the quarantine prohibits the removal of the following 
			items:  
			[to top of second column] | 
 
			 
				
				Any cut, 
				non-coniferous firewood.
				Bark from ash 
				trees, and wood chips larger than 1 inch from ash trees.
				Ash logs and 
				lumber with either the bark or the outer 1 inch of sapwood, or 
				both, attached.
				Any item made from 
				or containing the wood of the ash tree that is capable of 
				spreading the emerald ash borer.
				Any other article, product or means of 
				conveyance determined by the Illinois Department of Agriculture 
				to present a risk of spreading the beetle infestation. The counties under quarantine are Boone, Bureau, Champaign, 
			Clark, Coles, Cook, Cumberland, DeKalb, DeWitt, Douglas, DuPage, 
			Edgar, Effingham, Fayette, Ford, Grundy, Henry, Iroquois, Kane, 
			Kankakee, Kendall, Knox, Lake, LaSalle, Lee, Livingston, Macon, 
			Marion, Marshall, McHenry, McLean, Moultrie, Ogle, Piatt, Putnam, 
			Shelby, Stark, Vermilion, Will, Winnebago and Woodford.  For further information about the beetle, visit
			www.IllinoisEAB.com on the 
			Internet. 
								
								
            [Text from 
              
				Illinois Department of 
			Agriculture 
			file received from the
			
            
			
			Illinois Office of Communication and Information]
 
								
								
								 |