Tuesday, August 5, 2008

Emerld tree boa

Treat or Cut Ash Trees? How Best to Control Emerald Ash Borers
The problem of Ash trees threatened by the Emerald Ash Borer insect has homeowners and businesses trying to make the difficult decision on whether to treat or cut down their trees. ArborSystems can help with that decision as they have the answers for property owners. Arborists have been successfully protecting and saving Ash trees since 2001. They can survive and recover from EAB damage if they are properly diagnosed and treated in time. For more information, visit www.ArborSystems.com
Omaha, NE (PRWEB) August 5, 2008 - August 5, 2008 -- Deciding to treat or cut an Ash tree that is threatened by the Emerald Ash Borer insect can be a difficult question for most homeowners and businesses unless they have all the answers.
Arborists have been successfully protecting and saving Ash trees since 2001, said Chip Doolittle, president of ArborSystems in Omaha, NE
Source link: http://www.prweb.com/releases/2008/08/prweb1170844.htm


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If the emerald ash borer were a movie, the music would be getting more ominous.
The transplanted Asian beetle that's killed tens of millions of ash trees has been discovered in Wisconsin for the first time, raising fears that Minnesota could be next in line.
The discovery was made in a grove of dying ash trees in Ozaukee County, north of Milwaukee. 'Today's the day we hoped would never arrive but we knew it inevitably would,' said Brian Kuhn of the Wisconsin Department of Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection.
Emerald ash borers were first found in the Detroit area in 2002
Source link: http://www.kare11.com/news/news_article.aspx?storyid=521036




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