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PLEASE NOTE: In the autumn of 1995, we hatched the idea for a free, local gardening publication. The following spring, we published the first issue of Michigan Gardener magazine. Advertisers, readers, and distribution sites embraced our vision. Thus began an exciting journey of helping our local gardening community grow and prosper.
After 27 years, nearly 200 issues published, and millions of copies printed, we have decided it is time to end the publication of our Print Magazine and E-Newsletter.

Archive for the HWA tag

Newly identified hemlock could be resistant to hemlock wooly adelgid

May 8, 2019   •   Leave a Comment

Yale graduate student Nathan Havill was studying Asian hemlocks to learn why they can resist the hemlock wooly adelgid (HWA) while the Eastern hemlock (Tsuga canadensis) cannot. In the process, he studied some hemlocks growing at the Arnold Arboretum in Massachusetts, which were presumably southern Japanese hemlocks.

He discovered that the DNA of those hemlocks did not match that of any known species. An investigation showed that the Arnold Arboretum acquired the seeds in 1983 and that they came from Ulleungdo, a small island off the South Korean coast.

In 2008, Arnold biologist Peter Del Tredici traveled to Ulleungdo himself to gather more specimens, which he gave to Garth Homan, a botanist at the University of Maine. Homan found that some of the tree’s DNA was much like the southern Japanese hemlock, while other parts of the DNA more closely resembled that of a different Japanese species. Plus, the Ulleungdo tree had different needles and cones, and flushed new leaves several weeks earlier than the others.

After analyzing these and many other differences, the team announced a new hemlock species: Tsuga ulleungensis, the first new temperate conifer since 2002.

Scientists and others who hope to restore the devastated American hemlock forest are excited. However, since the tree is both rare and endangered, it will likely be a long process for all involved. Breeding work could produce trees that are mostly native but also adelgid resistant.

Excerpted from The Coniferite, Newsletter of the American Conifer Society Central Region.

Filed Under: Clippings Tagged With: Eastern hemlock, hemlock, hemlock wooly adelgid, HWA, Tsuga canadensis

Michigan’s Hemlock Trees Face Big Threat from a Tiny Insect

June 14, 2013   •   Leave a Comment

Michigan Department of Agriculture recommends inspecting your hemlock trees

The hemlock woolly adelgid (HWA) is a tiny, aphid–like insect that damages hemlock trees by inserting its mouthparts into the base of the needles and removing plant fluids.
The hemlock woolly adelgid (HWA) is a tiny, aphid–like insect that damages hemlock trees by inserting its mouthparts into the base of the needles and removing plant fluids.

The Michigan Department of Agriculture & Rural Development (MDARD) is reminding homeowners and landscapers that although hemlock woolly adelgid (HWA) can be seen year round, spring is one of the better times to inspect hemlocks for their presence.

“The HWA is a tiny, aphid–like insect that damages hemlock trees by inserting its mouthparts into the base of the needles and removing plant fluids,” said Gina Alessandri, director of MDARD’s Pesticide and Plant Pest Management Division. “This feeding activity results in needle loss, reduced twig growth, dieback and death. HWA can kill an entire tree in as few as three years.”

HWA was first discovered in Virginia in 1951 and has since infested hemlock trees from Maine to Georgia. HWA has decimated hemlock stands across much of the eastern U.S.

Approximately 100 million hemlock trees are present in Michigan forests and hemlocks are commonly utilized in landscape plantings. At this time, HWA is not known to exist in Michigan although it has been found here before.  HWA has been documented in the Harbor Springs/Petoskey area (2006, 2007, and 2010), the Utica and Clinton Township areas of Macomb County (2010), the Grand Haven and Holland areas (2010) and the New Buffalo area of Berrien County (2012). At each of these sites, MDARD required the removal and destruction of infested trees, treated hemlocks in close proximity to those infested trees with insecticides and is conducting follow-up surveys.

The biggest threat of introduction of HWA into Michigan comes from the importation of hemlocks, primarily through the nursery and landscape trade, from areas where HWA is established.  If you have ever had hemlock planted on your property, your hemlocks could have an increased risk of having HWA. Michigan’s Hemlock Woolly Adelgid Quarantine restricts the movement of hemlock into the state, and includes a complete ban on the movement of hemlock from infested areas of the country into Michigan.

Examine your hemlocks for the presence of white cottony masses on the underside of the outermost branch tips where the needles attach. As it matures, HWA produces a covering of cottony-like wax filaments to protect itself and its eggs from natural enemies and to prevent them from drying out. The “cotton” can be readily observed from late fall to early summer.

“Most positive reports of HWA in Michigan have come from alert and conscientious arborists and landscapers,” said Alessandri.  “This underscores the importance of citizen involvement in invasive pest detection.”

If you suspect you have seen HWA, immediately call MDARD’s Customer Service Center at (800) 292-3939 or via email at MDA-Info@michigan.gov and report it.”

Filed Under: Clippings Tagged With: hemlock, hemlock woolly adelgid, HWA

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