Trap Trees
When I hear the phrase “trap tree,” an image of Charlie Brown’s kite-eating tree in the Peanuts comic strip comes immediately to mind. But trap trees, or sentinel trees, are meant to nab a much smaller airborne object, the emerald ash borer (EAB).
The idea is to make certain ash trees more attractive to EAB, to serve both as a monitoring tool and as a means of slowing the rate of ash death. Early in the growing season, a chosen ash tree is girdled, which stresses it and induces it to create certain phenols and alcohols not present in healthy trees. It is on this chemical signature that the adult emerald ash borers home in.
According to Aaron Barrigar, a Forest Conservation Technician with the Saint Regis Mohawk Tribe Environment Division, “Girdling ash by removing the bark and phloem around the entire circumference of the trunk creates an effective attractant for emerald ash borer. EAB adults lay more eggs on stressed ash trees than on healthy trees, which is why girdled ash are effective detection tools for the insect.”
An ideal trap tree can be any black, green or white ash between four and ten inches in diameter (as measured 4.5’ off the ground), but must be healthy and have full sun on at least one side. It should have easy access, and not be within striking distance of any utilities, roads or buildings. The tree is girdled in late May, shortly after leaf-out.
Barrigar cautions that while the bark must be cut through, the sapwood has to remain intact. “If you cut into the sapwood, it disrupts xylem cells that transport water. This can cause the trap tree to die and be ineffective as a trap. You want the tree to stay alive during the summer.”
After EAB emergence is over, usually in late fall, the trap tree is felled, limbed, and placed up on sawhorses. Using a sharp draw-knife, the bark of the entire trunk is carefully peeled to look for emerald ash borer galleries and larvae.
The Saint Regis Mohawk Tribe’s Environment Division began its sentinel tree program in 2013, far ahead of any surrounding communities. Trap trees are monitored in and around Mohawk territory at Akwesasne. Along with Barrigar, Wayne Samphier, also with the Saint Regis Mohawk Tribe’s Environment Division, heads up the program. Both are active members of the St. Lawrence County EAB Task Force, a volunteer group formed at the behest of Paul Hetzler, Natural Resources Educator with Cornell Cooperative Extension.
With a focus on community education and outreach, the EAB Task Force comprises foresters, arborists, utility managers, teachers, Village, Town and County officials, as well as concerned citizens. Given that EAB has been found in two locations in St. Lawrence County, one in Franklin County, and one in northern Oswego County very near the Jefferson County border, the EAB task force feels a particular urgency in getting the word out. The group is planning to create as many as twenty sentinel trees around St. Lawrence County this spring. The Mohawk Tribe’s Environment Division is even more ambitious, with plans for nearly two hundred.
In December 2017, one of Barrigar and Samphier’s trap trees in St. Lawrence County yielded several dozen live EAB larvae in addition to a maze of galleries. There was evidence that the tree, a green ash on the edge of a wetland in Robert Moses State Park, may have been infested for more than one year.
Cornell University and Cooperative Extension will present a class on managing EAB and hemlock woolly adelgid (HWA), on April 12, 2018 from 8:30 AM to 3:00 PM at the Best Western University Inn in Canton. The class is geared toward land managers, pesticide applicators, arborists and other professionals, but the public is also welcome. NYSDEC Pesticide Recertification Credits are available in Categories 2, 3a, 6a, 9 and 10; SAF, ISA, and NYLT Credits pending approval.
Cost is $15.00, which includes lunch. Online registration is preferred through CCE website stlawrence.cce.cornell.edu or call (315) 379-9192. For more information on this class or the EAB Task Force, email ph59@cornell.edu
For individuals or groups interested in undertaking a sentinel-tree project in their area, there will be a how-to class, with hands-on demonstration, in early May (date TBA). The class will be held at the St. Regis Mohawk Tribal Housing Authority, 378 NY-37, Akwesasne (near Rooseveltown NY). For more information on the course, or sentinel trees in general, email Aaron Barrigar at aaron.barrigar@srmt-nsn.gov
Just got word that a date has been set for the trap-tree training.
Date: May 3, 2018 Time: 5:00 pm to 7:00 pm Location: Akwesasne Housing Authority, Training Room, 378 State Route 37, Akwesasne, NY 13655. For more information, contact the Environment Division at (518) 358-5937.
Comment
Started by Connor Youngerman in Agroforestry Aug 14. 0 Replies 0 Likes
Greetings forestry ning communities! My name is Connor Youngerman, and I’m an extension support specialist at the Cornell Small Farms Program; my focus is agroforestry and mushroom production. We are currently working on a research grant to…Continue
Started by Randy Williams in Woodlot Management. Last reply by John McNerney Aug 2. 3 Replies 0 Likes
I have some property where the best timber was harvested several years before I purchased it. There are now many areas where the buckthorn is so thick that nothing will grow under it. I am looking for suggestions on how to get these areas back…Continue
Started by Peter Smallidge in Project Profiles. Last reply by John McNerney Apr 15. 4 Replies 1 Like
Small-Scale Logging: Sugarbush and Woodlot Management Issue: Many woodlot owners and maple syrup producers want to be more active in gathering logs or firewood from their property. Often there are too few acres or too few trees to attract a…Continue
Tags: yourself, harvesting, woodlot, management, it
Started by Ben T. in Woodlot Management. Last reply by Patrik Schumann Mar 26. 1 Reply 0 Likes
Hi Everyone,I’ve been wondering what tree species are going to thrive over the next 50+ years as the climate warms in New York and I’m curious if folks are enhancing plantings of particular tree species for future commercial harvest with warmer and…Continue
Started by Carl Albers in Woodlot Management Dec 31, 2023. 0 Replies 0 Likes
Picture of a hemlock with rust colored bark. When I cut a nearby tree, also with rust colored bark, it was infested with HWA. Attached picture shows a Logrite ATV arch in use.Continue
Started by Carl Albers in Woodlot Management Dec 31, 2023. 0 Replies 0 Likes
The hemlocks in my woodlots have been infested with hemlock wooley adelgid (HWA) for at least three years now. Lately I've noticed some of them having a rust colored bark and I wonder if this is normal and that I just didn't notice it previously? …Continue
Started by Peter Smallidge in Woodlot Management Nov 28, 2023. 0 Replies 0 Likes
I had a question about control of mature white pine and hemlock to improve sunlight for enrichment planting of hardwoods. Following is my response, but I would like to know if anyone else has any experiences to share with control of these to…Continue
Started by Brett Chedzoy in Woodlot Management Aug 8, 2023. 0 Replies 1 Like
This Spring we had an opportunity to speak with writer John Litvaitis about the big picture of deer impacts on the hardwood forests of the Northeast. I posted the original story from the summer edition of Northern Woodlands to the…Continue
© 2024 Created by Peter Smallidge. Powered by
You need to be a member of CornellForestConnect to add comments!
Join CornellForestConnect