- Author: Randall Oliver
Published on: June 8, 2022
Results help inform best practices for managing the disease-causing beetle
The University of California, Irvine campus is home to a vast urban forest consisting of approximately 30,000 trees located in a mix of landscape, riparian and open space settings. In the mid-2010s, that forest came under threat from an invasive species of beetle that arborists and pest researchers were just learning about – the polyphagous shothole borer.
The tiny beetles, which may have arrived in California from their native Southeast Asia via infested shipping materials, tunnel into trees and introduce a fungus that serves as food...
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Public Value:
UCANR: Protecting California's natural resources
Tags: fusarium dieback (1), Irvine (1), ishb (1), John Kabashima (2), pest management (3), Pest Management/Diseases (2), polyphagous shothole borers (2), Randall Oliver (1), shothole borer (1), UC IPM (4), UC Irvine (1)
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