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<br />Emerald Ash Borer Management Plan <br />City of Ramsey, MN <br />Purpose: <br />By implementing the provisions of the Emerald Ash Borer Management Plan, the City is <br />attempting to minimize the disruption to its urban forest due to the inevitable infestation of <br />Emerald Ash Borer (EAB). Based on the current evidence from states such as Michigan and <br />Ohio, a proactive approach should help spread the costs associated with an EAB outbreak over a <br />manageable time period and limit the detrimental effect on property value, quality of life and the <br />environment. <br />Applicability: <br />This management plan is applicable to all public properties within the City, including rights-of- <br />way, boulevards, parks and open spaces, as well as private properties. <br />Administration: <br />The Community Development Department shall be responsible for implementing this program <br />and working with the Public Works Department in seeing that the provisions are carried out. <br />Introduction: <br />Emerald Ash Borer (EAB) is an introduced invasive insect that has now been confirmed in <br />twenty (20) states, including Minnesota, and two (2) Canadian provinces. EAB attacks all <br />species of ash trees (Fraxinus spp.) found in Minnesota, which include green ash (Fraxinus <br />pennsylvanica), white ash (Fraxinus americana) and black ash (Fraxinus nigra). This is of great <br />concern because Minnesota is home to more than 900 million ash trees statewide and unlike <br />some similar borers in the Agrilus genus (such as two lined chestnut borer and bronze birch <br />borer),EAB is not solely an opportunistic pest, it is known to attack both healthy and stressed <br />ash trees alike. <br />As of the adoption date of this management plan, EAB has been confirmed in four (4) Minnesota <br />counties: Hennepin, Ramsey, Houston and Winona. While it is impossible to accurately <br />will be found here. It is possible that this pest has moved beyond the known infestation sites and <br />has yet to be identified. <br />It is not the adult beetles that are detrimental to ash trees but rather the larvae of EAB (immature <br />stage), which feed on the inner bark of trees, disrupting <br />nutrients up to the canopy. As the number of larvae in a tree increases, less and less water and <br />nutrients reach the canopy, resulting in dieback in the upper portions of a tree. By the time <br />visible symptoms are obvious, the population of EAB has grown and likely spread to other trees <br />in the area. <br /> <br />