Column
Borers and their Control
By John Fulton
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[May 10, 2016]
Borer control time is coming up
shortly. They are largely unseen, but cause devastating damage.
Borers are most often the larvae of beetles or moths, and they do
their damage where you can’t see it. The eggs are laid on or under
the bark, and the small hatchling chews through to the part of the
tree they feed on. They spend almost their entire lives inside the
tree, where they can’t be seen or controlled.
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May 22 – 28, 2016 has been selected as Emerald Ash Borer
Awareness Week because it coincides with the time of year that
the adult beetles will begin to emerge. These borers have gotten
a lot of press the past few years, and have made ash trees
undesirable for planting. They are metallic green, about a half
inch long, and make “D” shaped exit holes (unlike the ash borers
we have had around here for many years which make “O” shaped
holes). This insect has become so widespread in Illinois,
including in our area counties, there is no longer an in-state
quarantine in place for movement of trees or wood.
Most borers are named for their primary target, but they also
affect other species of trees and shrubs. As an example, the
flat-headed apple borer can also affect pin oaks and about 15
other species. Many borers leave a tell-take hole in the trunk,
but some such as the ash borer are weak and have to enter
through a pruning or mechanical injury.
Here is a listing of common borers and their control times:
- Common ash borers (early June and early July),
- emerald ash borer (mid May through early June),
- bronze birch borer (mid May and repeat two times at two
week intervals),
- dogwood borer (mid May and mid June),
flatheaded apple borer (late May and repeat in three weeks),
- lilac borer (early June and early July),
locust borer (late August and mid September),
- mountain ash borer (early June and mid July),
- peach tree borer (mid June and mid July),
- viburnum borer (early June and early July),
- and Zimmerman pine moth (April or August).
You can see borer control isn’t an exact science. Treatment
times and re-applications are hopefully timed to catch the
hatching eggs on the outside of the trunk, or discourage the
adults from laying eggs. Some new research shows that trees that
are under stress give off a certain pheromone that attracts more
borers to the tree. So, keeping your trees in good growing shape
will go a long way to helping the situation. Fertilizing with
the same rate of broadcast fertilizer used for lawns will help
(apply it early May and early September), and watering during
extreme dry periods as well (with an inch of broadcast water per
week.
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Some of choices for borer control include permethrin,
bifenthrin, and acephate. Check the label for control on your
target borer. Imidacloprid has been on the market for several
years now. One trade name is Merit (one example sold for
homeowners is Bayer Advanced Tree and Shrub Insect Care). This
product use rate is an ounce per inch of circumference of the
tree trunk. You then mix it with three gallons of water and pour
around the base of the tree. It may take a few months for it to
translocate though the tree. Older trees don’t translocate as
well as younger, vigorous trees. A good time to apply it is in
early spring when the sap rises. Each treatment lasts about a
year. Fruit trees generally are treated differently with Sevin,
or just using the regular spray program due to the possibility
of residue in fruit.
Zimmerman pine moth is one of those “kind-of borers.” It
generally affects only severely weakened trees, and goes just
under the bark to girdle the cambium layer. It seems like older
Scotch, red, and Austrian pines are favorites when they begin to
decline. Bird damage from yellow bellied sapsuckers on trunks
and main limbs also looks like borer damage to many. This bird
damage is easily recognized by the evenly spaced holes in a
straight line.
[By JOHN FULTON, COUNTY EXTENSION
DIRECTOR SERVING LOGAN, MENARD, AND SANGAMON COUNTIES]
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