The hemlock woolly adelgid (Adelges tsugae Annand), is a small aphid-like insect that feeds on several species of hemlock (Tsuga). It was introduced to North America from Asia, and has been recognized in the United States since at least 1924. By sucking sap from the young twigs, the insect slows or prevents tree growth, causing needles to discolor from deep green to grayish green and to drop prematurely. The loss of new shoots and needles seriously impairs tree health. Defoliation and tree death can occur within several years. It is a serious threat to the hemlocks not only of Hemlock Gorge, but all of New England.
It has advanced into Southern Massachusetts, and it has appeared in the Gorge and in nearby forest. The threat it poses is serious, and the Friends of Hemlock Gorge are working with the MDC to develop a strategy. The approval of $60,000 by the legislature (July 31, 2000) to grow and release ladybugs holds out the promise that meaningful control may be achieved in time to save some of the hemlocks in the reservation.
Further Information:
- The USDA has a comprehensive web site for the adelgid
- Legislation: The first bill proposed to help combat the Adelgid in the gorge. It led to the appropriation of $60,000 for predator ladybugs on July 31, 2000.
- The National Association of Conservation Districts has published an encouraging note (June 1998) on the use of a ladybug strain to control the adelgid.
- The plans of Harvard University’s Arnold Arboretum to combat the adelgid (1999)
- Acadia National Park has a detailed profile on the insect, its dangers, and containment methods.
- Scientist Mark McClure of the Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station in Windsor has a site at http://www.state.ct.us/caes/fsen012f.htm. It details control methods other than the use of the ladybugs.
- James Rhea of the USDA summarizes the economic and environmental impact of the adelgid at http://info.metla.fi/iufro95abs/d2pap107.htm, but the report is old (1995).
- The Hemlock Woolly Adelgid Newsletter is a service of the USDA Forest Service, Northeastern Area in support of the Adelgid Working Group. Their excellent 1998 newsletter is at http: http://www.fs.fed.us/na/morgantown/fhp/hwa/hwa3.htm
- The US Forestry Service also put out a newsletter in 1996 that provides other information on the pest.
- The Virginia Tech Cooperative Extension also offers a brief review and bibliography, but it is dated (1996).
- The Vermont Entymology Research page and the USDA have good photographs of the adelgid.
- New York State has an active surveillance program. See https://extapps.dec.ny.gov/docs/lands_forests_pdf/hwafactsheet.pdf.
Finally, we have a news story on the adelgid published by the State House News Service in September, 2000 and reprinted here with the permission of the author.
A solution may be at hand for the woolly adelgid, but the battle is far from won. If you share our concern with the Woolly Adelgid, please consider participating in, and contributing to, the activities of the Friends of Hemlock Gorge.
Articles mentioning this topic:
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Annual Letter to Members, 2002
2002 was a year of ongoing accomplishments for the Friends in our efforts to preserve and enhance the beauty of Hemlock Gorge. These accomplishments are the fruits of your efforts, the legislative leadership of Senator Cynthia Creem and Representatives Kay Khan and Ruth Balser, and the hard work of Metropolitan District Commission Site Supervisor Kevin…
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Hopeful Adelgid News: The Ladybugs may be having an effect
It’s been more than a year since the release of the first ladybugs. We still don’t have an official opinion from forester Charlie Burnham on their impact. but at the August picnic, we all toured the site and inspected the hemlocks. What we saw made us cautiously optimistic. Although several trees have died, and evidence…
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Annual Letter to Members, 2001
2001 was a year of truly major accomplishments for the Friends in our efforts to preserve and enhance the beauty of Hemlock Gorge. These accomplishments are the fruits of your efforts, the legislative leadership of Senators Thomas Birmingham and Cynthia Creem and Representative Kay Khan, and the hard work of Metropolitan District Commission Site Supervisor…