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New York City conservation – Asian longhorned beetle – Invasive Species – New York City Parks & Recreation – New York environment

 

Asian longhorned beetle
The Asian longhorned beetle is large, ranging from .75 - 1.25" long, with very long, black antennae.

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"We aren’t doing anybody any favors by not having the eradication fully funded. I’d like to see the funding go to at least $30 million nationally. This is a national priority that must be addressed."

— Fiona Watt, Chief of Forestry and Horticulture, New York City Parks and Recreation Department

Go Deeper

Global Invasive Species Initiative

Check out a profile of the Asian longhorned beetle and find out how The Nature Conservancy is fighting invasive species around the world!

New York City Parks & Recreation

Find out how New York City is fighting the good fight against the beetle - and what you should do if you spot one.

Forest Health Program

Take a look at The Nature Conservancy's Forest Health Program is protecting our wooded resources from harmful invasive species.

Invasive Resources

Boxelder killed by ALB
A boxelder tree killed by Asian longhorned beetles. The bark has fallen off, revealing larval galleries and exit holes.

Asian longhorned beetle


Invasive species like the Asian longhorned beetle are on the march across the United States. Expanded global commerce, the absence of consistent policies, and lack of information and funding make combating invasive species a challenging task.

With 19 million residents, 13 airports, six shipping ports, and 800 miles of intrastate canal systems, New York is especially vulnerable to the risks posed by invasive species.

Compounding the challenges of keeping invasives out is the speed with which they are landing on American shores, leaving precious little time for nature and humans to prepare effective counterattacks. The absence of a master plan in New York and beyond puts the nation at major environmental and economic risk.

According to Watt, approximately 4,000 trees have been removed in the city alone as a result of the Asian longhorned beetle infestation. However, if the beetle manages to successfully infect all possible host trees in the city, the price tag to replace them could run upward of $2.2 billion.

Nationwide, the Asian longhorned beetle could kill a third of urban trees, which have a replacement value of about $669 billion. The threat is not far fetched: chestnut blight wiped out just about all the chestnut trees in America’s Eastern forests in the last century.

We know the beetle is on the move. After causing a scare when several infested trees were found on the edge of Central Park in 2006, the beetle showed up on Prall’s Island (near Staten Island) on March 1st of this year and was detected on Staten Island proper on March 22nd. Staten Island has the largest tree cover of all five boroughs and stands to lose half its trees if the beetle is not contained.

The Answer

It’s been 10 years since the beetle was first spotted in New York, so why hasn’t it been eradicated yet?

Money is a large part of the problem.

Despite the expansion of the beetle’s range across the five boroughs, Long Island, and New Jersey, funding for the national program has decreased dramatically since 2002.

According to the United States Department of Agriculture, in 2007 the national budget for the Asian longhorned beetle was $20 million, with $11 million going to New York City. The proposed national budget for 2008 has dropped to $18 million.

The current level of funding is a major decrease from the $50 million allocated in 1996 or the $48 million available as recently as 2002. At that time, the target date for the beetle’s eradication in New York City was set for 2010. Today, the deadline has been pushed back beyond 2030.

The decrease in funding and a new deadline more than 20 years away worries Watt. “The current federal money does not go far enough,” she says. “This isn’t even enough money to implement the federal protocol, which is to inject [with an insecticide] all host trees [within a 1/2 mile of] all known infested sites.”

In New York City, 47 percent of all trees are potential hosts. For the city to lose half its standing trees would mean a catastrophic social, economic, and environmental loss.

If the Asian longhorned beetle succeeds in breaking out of its quarantine and bolting into upstate New York and New England, there would follow a devastating economic blow to the sugar maple, tourism, timber, and forest product industries. Over 1.5 billion trees are susceptible across New England.

“Failure to fund eradication adequately now means we will have to spend a lot more money in the long run,” says the Conservancy’s Lowenstein. “We aren’t doing anybody any favors by not having the eradication fully funded. I’d like to see the funding go to at least $30 million nationally. This is a national priority that must be addressed.”

Despite the grimness of situation today, one city has shown that successful containment and eradication is possible: Chicago. The beetle was found there in 1998 but it has not been spotted since 2003.

Experts say community involvement and adequate funding helped keep the beetle in check. If there is no evidence of the Asian longhorned beetle after four years of survey, the area will likely be declared beetle-free this fall.

Chicago may have won one battle but the war on invasives is far from over. In fact, with the emerald ash borer knocking on the city’s door, the fight may never be over for Chicago, New York, or the country. Like the Asian longhorned beetle, the emerald ash borer hitched a ride from Asia in wood packing material, only this time it landed in Detroit, spreading throughout the Midwest and killing 20 million ash trees in the process. Foresters believe that this metallic green beetle has the potential to wipe out the ash tree population across the United States.

“If we don’t start dealing with the issue of imports and pests – by adopting strong prevention policies and putting adequate money into controlling those pests that enter the country despite prevention efforts – then we’re going to see massive impacts on cities and towns. The time to act is now,” says Lowenstein.

Linda Saucerman is a reporter and writer for numerous organizations including NYC Audubon and the Village Voice.

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Nature picture credits (top to bottom, left to right): Photo © USDA Forest Service (ALB); Photo © USDA Forest Service (ALB); Photo © USDA Forest Service (Tree)