Officials Detect Additional Walnut Twig Beetles in Butler County
Ohio Department of Agriculture to expand Thousand Cankers
Disease quarantine
REYNOLDSBURG,
Ohio (June 6, 2013)— The Ohio Department of Agriculture (ODA) today announced
more detections of Walnut Twig Beetle in Butler County in southwest Ohio. The
Walnut Twig Beetle is a small beetle known to carry a fungus that causes
Thousand Cankers Disease (TCD), which threatens the health and sustainability
of walnut trees.
The
beetles were found in traps set by ODA officials near walnut trees in Butler
County. Beetles were found in 9 of 26 traps. This is the second time Walnut Twig Beetles have
been detected in Butler County. In late 2012 the beetles were found in traps
set by Ohio Department of Natural Resources Division of Forestry officials near
a wood processing business. ODA officials have quarantined walnut products that
have the potential to spread the pest from leaving the site of discovery.
TCD is
caused when the Walnut Twig Beetles, which carry a fungus, bore into the
branches and trunk tissue of walnut trees. The tree suffers repeated infections
caused by the fungus and eventually dies. There is no known cure for TCD. The
disease was first found in Colorado in 2003 and has since been detected in 13
other states. In September 2012, ODA enacted an exterior state quarantine
regulating the transportation of walnut products from areas of the affected
states.
At this
time, ODA will move to expand its TCD quarantine to include Butler County.
Ohio’s updated quarantine, enforced by the ODA’s Plant Health Division, would
add Butler County and other newly infested counties in other states.
The
quarantine would restrict walnut materials from entering Ohio from areas where
TCD has become established. Restricted products originating from or traveling
through the regulated areas include walnut nursery stock, unprocessed walnut
lumber, or any other walnut material, such as logs, stumps, roots, branches,
mulch, wood chips and all firewood.
Exemptions
to the quarantine are nuts, nut meats, hulls, processed lumber (bark-free and
kiln-dried) and finished wood products without bark, such as walnut furniture,
instruments and gun stocks.
Landowners
and homeowners are strongly encouraged to watch for signs of TCD on their
walnut trees. Symptoms of TCD vary, but commonly include thinning crowns,
yellowing or wilted leaves in the crown, leaves that are smaller than normal
and limbs that died recently.
State
officials will continue to survey the Butler County area for beetles, as well
as surveying walnut trees for signs of TCD.
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Media Contact: Brett Gates, Public Information Officer,
614-752-9817
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